I collected plenty of good Halloween pictures on the net, but I forgot to label some of them. Where did I get this (above) from, and who did it!?
There were some really imaginative outdoor displays (above) this year.
It's amazing what people will put on their lawns (above)!
Since we're on the subject of outrageous Halloween efforts, I wonder if Glendale artist Peter Montgomery ever built that Jules Verne machine in his driveway? He went on the internet to ask for money for it.
This year saw zillions of gross pumpkin displays (above).
I'm wondering if Tim Burton and ray Bradbury have made Halloween Trees (above) a permanent holiday fixture. I saw a lot of Halloween trees this year. Some people have beautiful trees on their lawns and simply hang pumpkins on them...
...others set up Halloween trees inside their houses. Mostly the indoor trees are dried up twigs painted black. People either buy ornaments or hang homemade stuff from them: little poison bottles, paper witches, Godzillas, etc.
The "Blair Witch" movie (above) continued to influence reality TV this year. A zombie mini-series debuted, but I missed it.
Zombies (above) are still a big item at Halloween time.
Expensive rubber masks took a hit this year; nobody could afford them! I saw lots of cheap masks, though, some of them good. It looks like the last of the old vintage masks (the two pictures above) have finally been put out to pasture. They lingered on for years in updated versions, but I haven't seen any this time around.
I saw some vaguely similar ones, though. How do you like this one (above)? It's the love child of the famous Ernie Kovacs caveman mask with a Schnauzer.
I stumbled on a couple of Halloween blogs which featured photos of abandoned amusement parks (above).
Gee, it kinda puts things in perspective, doesn't it? Everything we know and love will eventually end up like this park (above).
So that was Halloween, 2010! The holiday is alive and well, at least in my part of the world.