You can take your life into your hands trying to carve a pumpkin. Wielding your sharpest knife while the kids jump up and down demanding Disney characters...
But there is another way. There are tonnes of beautiful and creative alternative ideas, many of which are child-friendly so they can get involved too.
1. Steampumkin
I saw this stunning pumpkin at a local festival. It was part of a group collaboration, and all the pumpkins had been painted white. Simply drape vintage costume jewellery for this glamorous gourd.
2. Glittered pumpkins
This glitzy pumpkin was part of the collection too. Totally covering the whole fruit and using longer, strand glitter gave a blurred, shimmery effect which was just beautiful.
Or, you could try a child-friendly version like
Domestic Goddesque has done using glue and sparkles.
3. Autumn leaf pumpkin
This gives a very natural effect, and makes the most of the beautiful autumnal colours around. Stick on with PVA glue, and check here for the
full tutorial.
4. Sparkly dots
Using glue dots is a mess free way to add glitter to your gourds, and gives a beautiful polka dot effect like
Craftulate has done here.
5. Eye Spy
Kids will LOVE sticking googly eyes on. Get self adhesive ones for a super-fast pumpkin makeover.
6. Spider Pumpkin
Painted pumpkins are great, but
Here Come The Girls has taken it to the next level by adding legs and making an adorable spider.
7. Stick on Faces
Peakle Pie shows you can still get the traditional pumpkin face without carving, simply by using black stick-on pieces.
8. Drip paint pumpkins
The Imagination Tree has used shimmery metallic paints to create these beautiful drip detail decorated pumpkins.
9. Crazy hair pumpkins.
OK, so there's a little cutting here, but
Sunhats and Welly boots show us how to make cute characters with crazy hair. Love the changeability of these.
10. Flower vase
If you're happy to cut the top off, then you could make a vase or centrepiece filled with seasonal flowers like
Martha Stewart does.
11. Yarn wrapped pumpkins
The Imagination Tree uses colourful wool and yarn to make these gloriously tactile pumpkins.
12. Washi tape stripes
Patterned sticky tape is perfect for decorating pumpkins, and you can tear strips off and let the kids stick it on in any design they desire.
13. Doily Pumpkins
Use old fashioned lace doilies which you can pick up in charity shops and apply with mod podge or PVA glue for a delicate vintage style decoration.
14. Treat Holder.
Martha Stewart again comes up trumps with this novel way to hold and dispense lollies to your trick or treaters.
15. Glitter Grooves.
Take some tinsel strands (lametta type - do they still call it that?) and glue it on to highlight the natural contours of the pumpkin. A simple and effective way to add a little sparkle.
Will you forgo the knife this year and give one of these a try? Which is your favourite?