Tag: X10
Halloween 2009 at my house, Video and Photos
After a few days of planning, several shopping trips, several days of preparing, and 5-6 hours of installation, my Halloween decorations for 2009 were ready to go.
Before I get into the details, here’s a video tour of what it looked like this year:
It was another successful year of entertaining the neighborhood. We had around 60 trick-or-treaters plus their parents for a likely total of close to 100 people stopping by. For the past few years, our decorations have been almost exclusively Haunted Mansion-themed and this year I decided to stray from that, opting for something a little spookier.
Reactions to the scarier decorations were great. Many kids loved all of it, stopping and staring at each scene -- some even taking pictures. Other kids were apprehensive about approaching but still enjoyed it. And then there were a few who were too scared to even walk up the driveway, but we made sure that all kids received candy, even if we had to walk down the driveway to give it to them.
Here’s a photo tour with more information about each scene (you can click on each image to enlarge it in a new window):
The front door scene was the highlight of the “event.” Michelle and I watched out the front door windows and waited for visitors to show up. As trick-or-treaters walked up the driveway and approached the doorway, they would hear the sounds of crawling and hissing bugs:
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
After the voice says “stick around for a while,” a loud whooshing noise plays at which point I would release the spider web-wrapped corpse, causing it to drop down from being half-folded above. Over the course of the night, the dropping body caused at least 20 scares, some in large groups. From inside the door, I heard plenty of screams and laughter. After that, we’d open the door and hand out candy to the often-stunned audience.
To achieve the front door scene, I used X10 lighting controls and a program called Indigo. The green light above the door, a black light, and a strobe light were all hooked up via X10 devices and switches (I have lots of X10- and Insteon-controlled lights throughout my house).
An audio cable ran from a computer in my office outside the front door and to a hidden set of speakers and a subwoofer. The scene set up in Indigo first dimmed down the green light then, using AppleScript, played the audio file. At the appropriate time, Indigo would turn on the strobe light and blacklight and I would release the hanging body. The corpse was hung using fishing wire, run through a loop in the ceiling. I would simply unhook it from inside the house and let go just at the right moment. After the trick-or-treaters left, I would pull the body back up and fasten the fishing line, waiting for the next visitor.
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