Entries Tagged 'Halloween' ↓

Tips for THE WIFE: Trick or Treating

Parents with Young Children:

Before Leaving Home :

1. Make your child eats dinner before setting out.

2. Make sure children use the bathroom before leaving home.

3. Plan your route ahead of time.

Flash Lights :

1. Make sure your child carries a flashlight or has reflective tape on their costume to make them more visible to cars.

2. Carry a flashlight to illuminate sidewalks, steps and paths. Check or replace batteries before you leave the house.

3. Glow Sticks can be used in the dark along with flashlights.

Costumes:

1. Try on costumes before Halloween to allow time for altering.

2. Make sure your costumes are hemmed so they don’t drag on the ground.

3. Wear comfortable walking shoes, that fit properly. Make sure shoe laces are tied tight.

4. Make-up should be hypoallergenic and non-toxic.

Safety Rules:

1. Try to go trick or treating during daylight hours

2. Always walk, do not run.

3. Stay on the Sidewalks. If their is no sidewalks, Then walk on the left side of the road, Single file, Facing traffic.

4. Obey all local traffic signals. Cross only at corners holding hands.

5. Instruct your child to never go into the home of a stranger or get into a stranger’s car.

6. Report any suspicious or criminal activity to an adult or the police.

Homes:

1.Visit houses that have lights on, especially houses with Halloween decorations.

2. Don’t trample through grass, flower beds and gardens.

3. Respect other people and their property.

Candy:

1. Instruct your children not to eat any treats until they bring them home to be examined by you.

2. Throw away candy that has loose wrappings, is unwrapped, has puncture holes, or is homemade.

3. Small children should not be allowed hard candy they may choke on.

4. Always carry a spare Halloween bag just in case yours breaks.

Manners:

Always be polite. And don’t forget to say “Thank You”.

Parents with Older Kids:

1. Make sure that your child is old enough and responsible enough to go out by themselves.

2. Plan a safe route so parents know where their older kids will be at all times and Set a time for their return home.

3. If your children go on their own, be sure they wear a watch, preferably one that can be read in the dark.

4. Let them know that they should stay together as a group if going out to Trick or Treat without an adult.

5. Let your children know not to cut through back alleys and fields. Make sure they know to stay in populated places and don’t go off the beaten track. Stay in well lighted areas

6. They should only Stop at familiar houses in your own neighborhood

Home Owners:

1. Make sure your yard is clear of such things as ladders, hoses, dog leashes and flower pots that can trip the young ones.

2. Pets get frightened on Halloween. Lock them up to protect them from cars or inadvertently bitting a trick-or-treater.

3. Battery powered jack O’lantern candles are preferable to a real flame.

4. If you do use candles, place the pumpkin well away from where trick-or-treaters will be walking or standing.

5. Make sure paper or cloth yard decorations won’t be blown into a flaming candle.

6. Healthy food alternatives for trick-or-treaters include packages of low-fat crackers with cheese or peanut butter filling, single-serve boxes of cereal, packaged fruit rolls, mini boxes of raisins and single-serve packets of low-fat popcorn that can be microwaved later. ( Make sure all treats handed out are sealed shut by a plastic wrapping)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Silent Film at The Disney Concert Hall


Celebrate Halloween at Walt Disney Concert Hall with our annual silent film horror classic, when Clark Wilson returns to improvise another spooky score on the hall’s magnificent pipe organ on Tuesday, October 31, at 8 p.m. This year, the featured film is Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde – one of the more faithful of the many screen adaptations of Robert Louis Stevenson’s story, recounting a visionary scientist’s ill-fated attempts to unleash the human mysteries that dwell beneath the shell of the civilized self.

Considered by many to be the first great American horror film, John S. Robertson’s Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (1920) allowed stage legend John Barrymore to deliver his first virtuoso performance on film. The film blends historic charm with grim naturalism. Mastered from a 35mm negative, this Kino edition beautifully showcases the dramatic brilliance and gruesome thrills of this influential American classic. Tickets ($15-$52) are on sale now online at LAPhil.com, at the Walt Disney Concert Hall Box Office, or via credit card phone order at 323.850.2000.

Halloween Party Ideas

Eyeball Highball

Meringue Bone Cookies

Jack O’ Lantern Tarts

Shrunken Heads in Cider

Orange Jack O’ Lanterns with Sorbet

Bubbling Cocktails

Pina Ghoulada

All Images and Ideas from MarthaStewart.Com

Larchmont Family Fair

Always charming and quaint, Larchmont Village, near Hancock Park will be hosting  a “Family Fair,” complete with talent and costume contests, as well as rides, games, and food suitable for the kiddies. The Larchmont Family Fair takes place on Sunday, October 24th from noon to 5 p.m. and is free, with all proceeds  going to various local non-profits.  Be sure to visit the pumpkin carving station and grilled corn with all the fixin’s. See you there!

Children’s Ready Made Halloweens Costumes

Root Beer Costume, $59.00

Milk Costume, $59.00

Popcorn Costume, $59.00

www.PotteryBarnKids.Com