[Preschools & Daycare] Halloween Wall Decoration Ideas [Part 2]
Why not make a wonderful Halloween wall display to make the Halloween that the kids are looking forward to even more exciting?
In this article, we introduce a variety of Halloween wall decorations.
Using origami, felt, and colored paper, decorate with vibrant pieces featuring Halloween essentials like pumpkins, ghosts, and spiders!
Some children may find Halloween characters scary and a bit intimidating, but a wall filled with cute ghosts and cool monsters is sure to make their hearts race with excitement!
[Kindergarten/Daycare] Halloween Wall Decoration Ideas [Part 2] (1–10)
Perfectly round monster

This is a cute monster wall decoration that looks like a pine cone.
Use wood glue diluted with water, stick torn newspaper onto an inflated water balloon, and let it sit until thoroughly dry.
Once it’s dry and hardened, cut off the balloon’s knot to complete the base.
Next, cut long, narrow strips of paper into fine fringe and attach them to the base to create a fluffy texture.
Thread a string from the inside of the balloon to make a hanging loop, then attach the eyes and mouth.
You’ll have a monster with such realistic fur that you’ll want to reach out and touch it!
Title Flag

This is a method for making the classic title “HAPPY HALLOWEEN” out of construction paper.
Use scissors or a craft knife to cut the construction paper into the shapes of the letters.
A key point is to also make the backing pennants that go behind the letters.
Using black and orange construction paper is the most common approach, but adding purple or yellow also works well.
You can vary the size of each letter slightly, and for a fun twist, try inverting the colors of the backing and the letters for repeated characters like P or E.
origami

A simple and very cute bat.
The way to make it is very simple: fold it into a triangle and then open up the ends.
Don’t you think it’s a bit similar to how you fold a crane? With just a little tweak, it can become either a crane or a bat—origami is amazing, isn’t it? Once you’ve made the bat, try making a ghost or a pumpkin too.
They’re all easy to make and super cute.
If you draw on the face, you can enjoy all kinds of variations—smiling or crying expressions, bared fangs, and more!
3D pumpkin

Let’s make a cute, three-dimensional Halloween pumpkin.
All you need are colored paper and wood glue.
Prepare nine pieces of paper cut into pumpkin shapes.
Set one aside as the backing, and fold the other eight pieces in half.
Glue the half-sides of the folded pieces together, adjusting them to fan out, then attach the assembled piece to the remaining backing.
Finally, add eyes and a mouth, and glue the pumpkin stem in the center—your pop-out pumpkin ghost for the wall is complete! It’s also fun to adapt this into other spooky characters like ghosts or skeletons.
Halloween Castle
Recreate a haunted castle where Halloween’s ghostly stars gather using a paper cup! Draw the castle’s door and windows on the cup and cut them out with a craft knife.
After painting the entire surface black, to mimic the castle’s lights, attach yellow construction paper to the inside of the cup where it will show through the windows.
Make a pointy castle roof from black origami paper and attach it to the top of the cup; add small towers on both sides to complete a castle that eerily glows on Halloween night.
Since cutting the paper cup can be dangerous for children, if you’re crafting together, have them help with the painting instead.
Halloween pumpkin with tissue paper
https://www.instagram.com/p/CjR0JVWLFG6/A Halloween pumpkin wall decoration made by crumpling tissue paper! The method is super simple: crumple orange tissue paper, put it into a clear plastic bag, shape it, and tie it with a pipe cleaner.
Stick eyes, a nose, and a mouth onto the side of the bag, and your pumpkin is done in no time.
You can stick it on the wall, but the drawstring-style look is so cute that tying it to a string and hanging it as a garland is also recommended.
If you crumple white tissue paper, you can make a ghost too—so be sure to try them together!
A colorful Halloween created by everyone
https://www.instagram.com/p/CjUv5a5PB-4/This is a Halloween wall display combining handprint ghosts from the 0-year-old class, footprint pumpkins from the 1-year-old class, and mummies from the 2-year-old class.
It brings together the infant classes’ works on a single wall.
Please pre-cut the ghosts, pumpkin vines and leaves, and mummies from construction paper.
For the white mummy strips, cut construction paper into long, thin pieces and have the 2-year-olds stick them on.
For the background, use rollers with the children to paint it purple and black to create atmosphere.
It’s also recommended to add a full moon, a castle, and bats alongside the artworks.



