15 Halloween Crafts to Make and Sell

Flat lay of five finished Halloween crafts styled on a white wooden table

Halloween is one of the busiest craft-selling seasons of the whole year, and honestly, it's my favorite one to shop for handmade goods. Buyers aren't just browsing — they're hunting for that one spooky-cute piece that makes their porch or their gift table stand out. That's exactly why this list exists.

Below you'll find 15 Halloween crafts to make and sell, each with the full materials list, step-by-step instructions, and real selling tips. Pick one that excites you, gather your supplies, and let's get you making (and selling) this week.

1. Hand-Poured Pumpkin Spice Soy Candles

Finished pumpkin spice soy candle in an amber glass jar

Pumpkin spice candles are basically a fall love language at this point. Shoppers grab them for their own homes, then grab three more for gifts, so a single good scent can move a lot of inventory.

They sell so well because they hit two triggers at once: cozy nostalgia and a genuinely useful product people burn through fast, which means repeat buyers.

Selling potential: $12–$18 per 8 oz jar. Materials run about $3–$4 each, and Etsy or local fall markets both move these quickly.

What You'll Need

  • Soy wax flakes — 1 lb per 3 candles
  • Pumpkin spice fragrance oil — 1 oz per lb of wax
  • Cotton candle wicks — 1 per jar, pre-tabbed
  • Amber glass candle jars — 8 oz, 1 per candle
  • Wick stickers — 1 per jar
  • Kraft paper labels — 1 per jar
  • Double boiler or wax melting pitcher — 1
  • Kitchen thermometer — 1
  • Wooden stir stick or spoon — 1
  • Wick centering tool or 2 clothespins — 1 set

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands pouring melted wax into a candle jar

  1. Step 1: Prep Your Jars
    Wipe each jar clean and dry, then stick a wick sticker to the bottom center of the jar. Press the wick firmly so it stands straight up.
  2. Step 2: Melt the Wax
    Melt soy wax flakes in a double boiler until fully liquid, stirring gently. Watch the thermometer — you want it around 185°F before adding fragrance.
  3. Step 3: Add Fragrance Oil
    Stir in your pumpkin spice fragrance oil at the recommended ratio, usually 1 oz per pound of wax. Stir for a full 2 minutes so the scent binds evenly, this is the step people rush and regret.
  4. Step 4: Cool Slightly Before Pouring
    Let the wax cool to about 130–135°F before pouring — pouring too hot causes sinkholes later. This patience step is the pro hack that separates amateur candles from ones that look store-bought.
  5. Step 5: Pour and Center the Wick
    Pour the wax slowly into your prepped jars, then use clothespins to hold the wick perfectly centered while it sets. Leave undisturbed for at least 4 hours.
  6. Step 6: Trim and Label
    Once fully cured (24 hours), trim the wick to a quarter-inch and wrap a kraft label around the jar. A short, friendly burn-time note on the label adds a professional touch.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph candles lit at dusk with warm window light — the glow sells the cozy feeling instantly.
  • Bundle three mini sizes into a "fall sampler" set for a higher average order value.
  • Batch-pour 12 at a time in one session to cut your per-unit labor cost significantly.
  • Sell in person at farmers markets where people can smell-test before buying.

2. Macrame Ghost Wall Hangings

Finished macrame ghost wall hanging

Macrame never really left, and giving it a cute ghost twist makes it feel fresh for October. It's soft, boho, and completely different from the usual plastic Halloween decor people are tired of.

Buyers love that it works as tasteful autumn decor, not just a one-week Halloween prop, so it stays up on their wall well past October 31st.

Selling potential: $15–$28 per piece. Materials cost about $3–$5, best sold on Etsy or boho home decor markets.

What You'll Need

  • White cotton macrame cord — 3mm, about 6 yards per ghost
  • Wooden dowel — 6 inches, 1 per hanging
  • Black embroidery floss — small amount for eyes
  • Embroidery needle — 1
  • Scissors — 1 pair, sharp
  • Fine-tooth comb — 1, for fluffing the cord ends
  • Measuring tape — 1

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands tying a knot in macrame cord

  1. Step 1: Cut Your Cords
    Cut 8 to 10 lengths of cord, each about 24 inches long, folding each in half over the dowel. This gives you the base "body" of your ghost.
  2. Step 2: Mount to the Dowel
    Attach each folded cord to the dowel using a lark's head knot, sliding them close together so no dowel shows through.
  3. Step 3: Shape the Head
    About 2 inches down from the dowel, gather all cords together and tie a tight overhand knot to form the ghost's rounded head shape.
  4. Step 4: Let the Body Flow
    Leave the rest of the cords hanging loose to form the flowing ghost body — no more knots needed below the head.
  5. Step 5: Add the Face
    Using black embroidery floss and a French knot, stitch two small eyes onto the head section for the cute expression. A tiny "o" mouth stitched below adds extra charm.
  6. Step 6: Trim to Length
    Trim the bottom cords straight across or at a soft angle, whichever look you're going for. Comb out the very ends with a fine-tooth comb for a fluffy finish.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Style product photos against a plain wall so the shape and texture pop.
  • Offer a small and large size — the size options alone can double your listing views.
  • Make these in batches of 5 dowels at once since the knotting motion is repetitive and fast once you're warmed up.
  • Tag listings with both "Halloween decor" and "boho fall decor" to catch two different shopper searches.

3. Painted Wine Cork Pumpkins

Finished painted wine cork pumpkins in a small bowl

These tiny pumpkins are the ultimate low-cost, high-charm craft — perfect for anyone just starting to sell handmade. They're small, light to ship, and impossibly cute in bulk.

Shoppers snap these up as bowl fillers, tiered tray decor, or stocking-stuffer-style gifts, which means they sell in multiples, not just one at a time.

Selling potential: $2–$4 per pumpkin, or $10–$15 for a set of 5. Materials cost pennies per piece, ideal for craft fairs.

What You'll Need

  • Used wine corks — 1 per pumpkin
  • Orange acrylic craft paint — small bottle
  • Green acrylic craft paint — small bottle, for stems
  • Brown floral wire — 2-inch pieces, for stems
  • Small paintbrush — size 6, round tip
  • Craft knife or box cutter — 1, adult use only
  • Hot glue gun and glue sticks — 1 set
  • Small wooden bowl for display — optional

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands painting a wine cork orange

  1. Step 1: Clean Your Corks
    Wipe each cork down to remove wine residue and let dry fully before painting. Any moisture left behind will make the paint bead up.
  2. Step 2: Paint the Base Coat
    Paint each cork fully orange, rotating it as you go so you don't miss the sides. Let dry for 20 minutes, then apply a second coat for solid coverage.
  3. Step 3: Add Pumpkin Ridges
    Once dry, use a fine brush with a slightly darker orange or brown to add thin vertical ridge lines around the cork. This small detail is what makes it read as a pumpkin instead of just an orange stick.
  4. Step 4: Poke a Stem Hole
    Have an adult carefully use a craft knife to make a small notch in the top center of the cork. Go slow here — this is the step to be most careful with.
  5. Step 5: Make the Stems
    Cut floral wire into 1-inch pieces and paint them brown or leave natural, then bend each slightly for a curled look.
  6. Step 6: Glue It Together
    Dab a small amount of hot glue into the notch and insert the stem, holding for 10 seconds until set. Add a tiny green painted leaf beside the stem for extra detail if desired.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Sell them in sets of 5 or 10 in a small burlap bag — bundling raises your average sale.
  • Photograph them nestled in a wooden bowl with a few real leaves for a cozy styled shot.
  • Batch-paint 30–40 corks in one sitting since the drying time is the only real bottleneck.
  • These do great at craft fair checkout tables as an easy impulse add-on.

4. Felt Candy Corn Garland

Finished felt candy corn garland coiled on a table

Candy corn is basically the mascot of Halloween decor, and turning it into a soft felt garland makes it wall-ready and reusable year after year. It's cheerful without being scary, which broadens who will buy it.

It sells because it's an easy "hang it and done" decor piece — no assembly required for the buyer, just instant charm.

Selling potential: $14–$22 per 6-foot garland. Materials run about $4–$6, sells well on Etsy and at fall home decor booths.

What You'll Need

  • Yellow felt sheets — 3, 9x12 inch
  • Orange felt sheets — 3, 9x12 inch
  • White felt sheets — 2, 9x12 inch
  • Jute twine — 6 feet
  • Fabric scissors — 1 pair
  • Hot glue gun and glue sticks — 1 set
  • Fabric marking pen — 1
  • Ruler — 1

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands gluing felt candy corn pieces onto twine

  1. Step 1: Cut a Triangle Template
    Cut one felt triangle about 3 inches tall and 2 inches wide to use as your cutting guide. Trace it repeatedly onto felt with the fabric pen.
  2. Step 2: Cut All Your Pieces
    Cut the traced triangles from yellow, orange, and white felt — you'll need three colors per candy corn shape. Plan for about 15–20 candy corns for a 6-foot garland.
  3. Step 3: Layer Each Piece
    Stack a yellow triangle base, an orange middle band, and a small white tip for each candy corn shape. Trim the layered edges even if needed.
  4. Step 4: Glue the Layers Together
    Use small dabs of hot glue to fuse the three felt layers into one solid candy corn shape. Press firmly for a few seconds so it holds.
  5. Step 5: Attach to the Twine
    Lay your twine out flat and glue each candy corn shape along it, spacing them about 4 inches apart. Keep them all facing the same direction for a clean, consistent look.
  6. Step 6: Add Hanging Loops
    Tie a small loop at each end of the twine so the garland is ready to hang straight out of the package.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph the garland hung against a neutral wall or mantel for scale and styling context.
  • Offer a "make it a set" upsell with a matching mini garland for a smaller space.
  • Pre-cut a big batch of triangle shapes in one sitting to speed up assembly later.
  • Mention "reusable year after year" in your listing — it justifies a slightly higher price.

5. Resin Halloween Coasters

Finished resin Halloween coasters stacked

Resin coasters have a satisfying, glossy, almost candy-like look that photographs beautifully. A Halloween color palette turns a home decor staple into a seasonal gift people didn't know they needed.

They sell well because they're functional, not just decorative, so buyers justify the purchase as something they'll actually use daily.

Selling potential: $18–$32 for a set of 4. Materials cost about $6–$9 per set, best sold on Etsy or at fall craft markets.

What You'll Need

  • Clear epoxy resin and hardener kit — 1, per set instructions
  • Orange and black resin pigment — small bottles
  • Round silicone coaster molds — 4
  • Fine glitter — small jar, optional
  • Mixing cups — 2, disposable
  • Wooden stir sticks — 2
  • Heat gun or small torch — 1, for popping bubbles
  • Nitrile gloves — 1 pair
  • Cork backing pads — 4

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands pouring orange resin into a coaster mold

  1. Step 1: Mix Your Resin
    Measure equal parts resin and hardener into a mixing cup and stir slowly for a full 3 minutes. Scrape the sides and bottom of the cup so nothing goes uncured.
  2. Step 2: Split and Tint
    Divide the mixed resin into two cups, tinting one orange and one black with your pigment drops. Stir each color thoroughly and separately.
  3. Step 3: Pour the Base Layer
    Pour a thin layer of orange resin into each silicone mold, tilting gently to spread it evenly across the bottom.
  4. Step 4: Add the Swirl
    Drop small amounts of black resin on top and use a stir stick to gently swirl — don't overmix or you'll lose the marbled effect. This is the fun step, so take your time here.
  5. Step 5: Pop the Bubbles
    Wave a heat gun or small torch quickly over the surface to pop any trapped air bubbles. Keep it moving so you don't scorch the resin.
  6. Step 6: Cure and Demold
    Let the coasters cure undisturbed for 24–48 hours per your resin's instructions, then carefully pop them out of the molds.
  7. Step 7: Finish the Backs
    Stick a cork backing pad to the bottom of each coaster to protect furniture and give it a finished look.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Shoot photos with a drink glass on top to show real-world use and scale.
  • Sell as a themed set of 4 rather than singles for a stronger perceived value.
  • Pour multiple molds in one working session since resin curing time is the real limiting factor.
  • Offer a custom color request option — it's an easy way to stand out from other resin sellers.

6. Spooky Cute Embroidery Hoop Art

Finished embroidery hoop art with a ghost design

Hand embroidery has a slow, handmade charm that mass-produced decor just can't fake, and a cute ghost or cat design keeps it playful instead of twee. It appeals to buyers who want something that feels genuinely crafted.

This one sells because it looks like wall art, not a seasonal decoration, so it earns a spot in someone's home well beyond October.

Selling potential: $20–$35 per hoop. Materials cost about $4–$6, sells especially well on Etsy.

What You'll Need

  • 6-inch wooden embroidery hoop — 1
  • Natural linen or cotton fabric — 1 fat quarter
  • Black embroidery floss — 1 skein
  • Purple or orange embroidery floss — 1 skein, for accents
  • Embroidery needle — 1
  • Water-soluble fabric marker — 1
  • Embroidery scissors — 1 pair
  • Fabric glue — small bottle, for the back finish

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands stitching a French knot on embroidery hoop fabric

  1. Step 1: Stretch Your Fabric
    Sandwich the linen between the two hoop rings and pull taut evenly on all sides before tightening the screw. A drum-tight surface makes stitching much easier.
  2. Step 2: Trace Your Design
    Use the water-soluble marker to lightly sketch a simple ghost or cat shape in the center of the fabric. Keep the design simple — it stitches faster and looks cleaner.
  3. Step 3: Outline in Backstitch
    Thread your needle with black floss and outline the shape using a neat backstitch. Keep your stitches small and even for a crisp line.
  4. Step 4: Add the Face
    Use a French knot for each eye — wrap the floss twice around the needle before pulling through for that little raised dot look. This detail is what makes the design feel "cute" instead of flat.
  5. Step 5: Fill in Accents
    Stitch a small accent detail like a star or moon nearby using your second floss color. Keep it minimal so the main shape stays the star of the piece.
  6. Step 6: Finish the Back
    Trim excess fabric to an inch beyond the hoop, then run a thin line of fabric glue around the inside edge and fold the fabric over it. Let dry flat for a clean, professional back.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph the hoop hanging on a plain wall with soft shadow for an art-gallery feel.
  • Offer a couple of design variations (ghost, cat, moon) so buyers can pick their favorite.
  • Pre-trace a batch of hoops in one sitting so stitching sessions go faster later.
  • Mention "hand-stitched" prominently — it's the exact phrase embroidery shoppers search for.

7. Mini Witch Hat Pincushions

Finished mini witch hat pincushion

This one is a favorite among fellow crafters because it's both decor and a genuinely useful sewing tool. A tiny witch hat pincushion is the kind of novelty item that makes people smile the second they see it.

It sells fast in the run-up to Halloween because sewists and quilters are actively searching for cute, functional notions.

Selling potential: $10–$16 per piece. Materials cost about $2–$3, ideal for Etsy's sewing notions category.

What You'll Need

  • Black felt — 1 sheet, 9x12 inch
  • Purple ribbon — 6 inches, half-inch width
  • Polyfill stuffing — small handful
  • Cardboard circle — 2 inches wide, for the hat brim base
  • Hot glue gun and glue sticks — 1 set
  • Fabric scissors — 1 pair
  • Straight pins — a few, to hold shape while gluing

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands gluing a ribbon band onto a felt witch hat

  1. Step 1: Cut the Brim
    Cut a felt circle about 4 inches wide to form the flat brim of the hat, using the cardboard circle as backing support.
  2. Step 2: Roll the Cone
    Roll a felt triangle into a tight cone shape for the hat top seconds until fully set.
  3. Step 5: Add the Ribbon Band
    Wrap the purple ribbon around the base of the cone and glue it in place, trimming any excess. A tiny bow or buckle shape adds a nice finishing detail.
  4. Step 6: Reinforce the Brim Edge
    Glue a thin trim or a second felt layer under the brim edge for a cleaner, sturdier finish that won't curl over time.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Style photos with a few pins tucked into the hat to show it in actual use.
  • List it under both "Halloween decor" and "sewing notions" for double the search traffic.
  • Batch-cut brims and cones assembly-line style to speed up production.
  • Offer a bundle discount for sewists buying multiples as gifts for their quilting group.

8. Halloween Wreaths with Faux Florals

Finished Halloween wreath with faux florals

Wreaths are a front-door staple, and a Halloween version with moody florals feels elevated compared to the usual plastic skeleton look. It appeals to buyers who want their whole house to look styled, not just decorated.

This one sells because it's a big, high-impact statement piece — buyers are willing to spend more on something that greets every guest at the door.

Selling potential: $35–$60 per wreath. Materials cost about $10–$15, sells extremely well on Etsy and at home decor pop-ups.

What You'll Need

  • Grapevine wreath base — 16 inch
  • Faux black florals (ranunculus or roses) — 6 stems
  • Faux orange florals or mini pumpkins — 4 stems or picks
  • Faux eucalyptus greenery — 3 stems
  • Floral wire — 1 spool
  • Wire cutters — 1 pair
  • Hot glue gun and glue sticks — 1 set
  • Ribbon for hanging — 18 inches

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands wiring a pumpkin pick onto a wreath base

  1. Step 1: Plan Your Layout
    Lay your florals loosely across the wreath base before attaching anything, deciding where your focal cluster will sit. Most wreaths look best with an asymmetrical cluster rather than evenly spaced stems.
  2. Step 2: Trim Your Stems
    Use wire cutters to trim each floral stem to about 4–5 inches, leaving enough to insert securely into the base.
  3. Step 3: Attach the Greenery First
    Wire the eucalyptus stems into the base first to create a soft green foundation layer. This step gives everything else something to sit against.
  4. Step 4: Add the Focal Florals
    Wire in your black florals next, clustering them together in one main area rather than scattering. Secure each stem with a wire twist and a small dab of hot glue for extra hold.
  5. Step 5: Tuck in Pumpkins and Accents
    Glue mini pumpkin picks and any orange florals into the gaps between the black blooms. Angle a couple of pieces outward so the wreath doesn't look flat.
  6. Step 6: Attach the Hanging Ribbon
    Loop and knot your ribbon around the top back of the wreath base, leaving enough length to hang from a door hook.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph the wreath hanging on an actual door for realistic scale and context.
  • Wreaths ship best flattened slightly in a sturdy box — mention "carefully packaged" in your listing to ease buyer worry.
  • Batch-buy florals in bulk online to cut your per-wreath material cost significantly.
  • Offer a "add a name sign" upsell for an easy higher-ticket option.

9. Black Cat Clay Trinket Dishes

Finished black cat clay trinket dishes

Trinket dishes are everywhere right now, and a black cat silhouette shape gives it an instant Halloween identity without shouting "seasonal only." It's the kind of small luxury item people buy for themselves.

It sells because it's functional jewelry storage disguised as decor, which makes it an easy "why not" purchase at a low price point.

Selling potential: $14–$24 per dish. Materials cost about $2–$3, sells beautifully on Etsy.

What You'll Need

  • Air-dry clay — 1 lb block
  • Rolling pin — 1, small craft size
  • Black cat silhouette cutter or template — 1
  • Clay shaping tool — 1 set
  • Fine sandpaper — 1 sheet, 220 grit
  • Matte black acrylic paint — small bottle
  • Small paintbrush — 1
  • Clear matte sealant spray — 1 can

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands shaping clay into a black cat dish

  1. Step 1: Roll Out the Clay
    Roll the air-dry clay to about a quarter-inch thickness on a clean, smooth surface. Keep the thickness even so it dries without warping.
  2. Step 2: Cut the Silhouette
    Press your cat silhouette cutter into the rolled clay, or trace around a template with a craft knife. Peel away the excess clay carefully.
  3. Step 3: Shape the Dish Curve
    Gently drape the flat cutout over a small curved mold, like a shallow bowl, to create a subtle dish shape. Smooth the edges with your fingers as it sets.
  4. Step 4: Let It Dry Fully
    Set the piece aside to air-dry for 24–48 hours depending on thickness — rushing this step causes cracking.
  5. Step 5: Sand the Edges
    Once fully dry, lightly sand the edges with fine sandpaper for a smooth, professional finish.
  6. Step 6: Paint and Seal
    Paint the dish with two thin coats of matte black acrylic, letting it dry between coats. Finish with a clear matte sealant spray to protect the surface.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Style photos with a small ring or two inside the dish to show its everyday use.
  • Batch-cut and dry a dozen dishes at once since drying time is the real production bottleneck.
  • Offer a gold-rimmed edge option as a premium upgrade for a few dollars more.
  • These make great add-on items at checkout for customers already buying jewelry.

10. Personalized Pumpkin Tote Bags

Finished personalized pumpkin tote bag

A personalized tote bag turns a simple pumpkin design into a keepsake, which is exactly why parents and teachers snap these up every fall. Adding a name makes it feel like a gift, not just a product.

It sells because personalization removes the "do I really need this" hesitation — once it has someone's name on it, it's already theirs.

Selling potential: $16–$26 per bag. Materials cost about $4–$5, sells especially well around school fall festivals.

What You'll Need

  • Blank canvas tote bag — 1, 15x16 inch
  • Orange fabric paint — small bottle
  • Green fabric paint — small bottle, for the stem
  • Black fabric paint — small bottle, for the name script
  • Fabric paintbrushes — 2, sizes 4 and 8
  • Cardboard sheet — 1, to insert inside the bag while painting
  • Chalk pencil — 1, for sketching the design first
  • Painter's tape — small roll

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands painting a pumpkin design on a canvas tote

  1. Step 1: Prep the Bag
    Slide the cardboard sheet inside the tote to prevent paint from bleeding through to the back layer.
  2. Step 2: Sketch the Design
    Lightly sketch a simple round pumpkin shape with the chalk pencil where you want it centered on the bag. Keep the shape rounded and friendly, not overly detailed.
  3. Step 3: Paint the Pumpkin Base
    Fill in the pumpkin shape with orange fabric paint using the larger brush, applying two coats for solid, even coverage.
  4. Step 4: Add Ridge Lines
    Once the base coat is dry, use the smaller brush to paint thin vertical ridge lines in a slightly darker orange.
  5. Step 5: Paint the Stem
    Add a small green stem at the top of the pumpkin using the smaller brush for a crisp, clean shape.
  6. Step 6: Add the Personalized Name
    Once everything else is dry, hand-paint the requested name in a simple script below or beside the pumpkin using black fabric paint. Go slow — this is the detail the buyer is really paying for.
  7. Step 7: Heat Set the Paint
    Once fully dry, iron over the design (with a cloth barrier) per your fabric paint's instructions to heat-set it for washability.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Add a personalization text box to your listing so buyers can request a name at checkout.
  • Photograph the bag being carried or hung to show real-world size and use.
  • Pre-sketch designs on several bags at once, then batch-paint all the base coats together.
  • These sell especially well in September and early October — list them early.

11. Glow-in-the-Dark Halloween Slime

Finished glow-in-the-dark slime in a container

Slime is a proven bestseller in the kids' craft space, and a glow-in-the-dark Halloween twist makes it feel extra special for the season. It's tactile, fun, and instantly shareable on video.

It sells because it's a sensory toy parents actually want to buy — screen-free, hands-on play that keeps kids entertained.

Selling potential: $8–$14 per container. Materials cost about $1–$2, perfect for school markets and Etsy's kids category.

What You'll Need

  • Clear glue — 4 oz bottle
  • Glow-in-the-dark pigment powder — small jar
  • Liquid starch or contact lens solution — for activating
  • Baking soda — 1 teaspoon
  • Green food coloring — a few drops, optional
  • Fine star glitter — small jar
  • Mixing bowl — 1
  • Silicone spatula — 1
  • Small clear storage containers — 1 per batch

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands stretching glowing green slime

  1. Step 1: Mix the Base
    Pour the clear glue into your mixing bowl and stir in the baking soda until fully combined.
  2. Step 2: Add Color and Glow Powder
    Stir in a few drops of green food coloring and a spoonful of glow-in-the-dark pigment powder until evenly tinted.
  3. Step 3: Fold in the Glitter
    Add fine star glitter and fold it through so it's distributed evenly and doesn't clump.
  4. Step 4: Activate the Slime
    Add liquid starch a little at a time, stirring constantly, until the mixture starts pulling away from the bowl's edges.
  5. Step 5: Knead by Hand
    Once it's too thick to stir, knead it by hand for a couple of minutes until it reaches a smooth, stretchy texture. If it's still sticky, add a few more drops of starch.
  6. Step 6: Charge and Package
    Hold the slime under a bright light for a minute to "charge" the glow pigment before packaging it in a labeled container.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Film a short video of the slime glowing in the dark — this single visual sells the product better than any photo.
  • Batch-make a big base recipe and divide it into individual containers to save time.
  • Add a fun label like "Monster Ooze" to make the product feel extra playful.
  • These are great add-on items for trick-or-treat party favor bundles.

12. Halloween Bath Bombs

Finished pumpkin-shaped Halloween bath bombs

Bath bombs are a proven self-care gift category, and a pumpkin-shaped Halloween version taps right into the seasonal gifting rush. They feel indulgent without being expensive to make.

They sell well because they're consumable — happy customers use them up and come right back to buy more.

Selling potential: $6–$10 each, or $20–$30 for a set of 4. Materials cost about $1–$2 each, great for Etsy and craft fairs.

What You'll Need

  • Baking soda — 1 cup
  • Citric acid — half cup
  • Cornstarch — half cup
  • Epsom salt — half cup
  • Coconut oil or almond oil — 2 tablespoons
  • Pumpkin spice essential oil — 1 teaspoon
  • Orange and black cosmetic mica powder — small jars
  • Witch hazel in a spray bottle — for binding
  • Pumpkin-shaped silicone mold — 1
  • Mixing bowl — 1
  • Gloves — 1 pair

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands pressing bath bomb mixture into a pumpkin mold

  1. Step 1: Mix the Dry Ingredients
    Whisk together baking soda, citric acid, cornstarch, and Epsom salt in a large bowl, breaking up any clumps.
  2. Step 2: Add the Oils
    Drizzle in the coconut oil and pumpkin spice essential oil, mixing quickly with your gloved hands before it starts to fizz.
  3. Step 3: Tint Your Mixture
    Split the mixture and blend in orange mica powder to most of it, saving a small portion to tint black for accent swirls.
  4. Step 4: Spritz to Bind
    Lightly spritz the mixture with witch hazel while mixing, just enough that it holds together when squeezed. Add too much and it'll fizz early, so go slow.
  5. Step 5: Pack the Mold
    Firmly press the mixture into both halves of the pumpkin mold, overpacking slightly before joining the two halves together.
  6. Step 6: Unmold and Cure
    Let it sit for 1–2 minutes, then carefully release from the mold and set aside to harden for 24 hours.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Wrap each bath bomb individually in cellophane to protect the shape and add a gift-ready look.
  • Photograph them both dry and fizzing in water — buyers love seeing the color swirl in action.
  • Batch-mix a large dry blend ahead of time and portion it out as you make molds.
  • Sell as a "Spooky Spa Set" bundle with a bar of soap for a bigger ticket item.

13. Ghost Mason Jar Luminaries

Finished ghost mason jar luminaries

Mason jar crafts are endlessly popular, and painting them into cute ghost faces makes a simple upcycled jar feel like a proper Halloween decor piece. They're beginner-friendly and quick to produce.

They sell well because they double as functional lighting when a battery candle is added, making them useful beyond just looks.

Selling potential: $10–$18 per jar. Materials cost about $2–$3, sells nicely at porch decor markets.

What You'll Need

  • Clean mason jars — 1 per luminary, pint size
  • White acrylic craft paint — small bottle
  • Black acrylic craft paint — small bottle, for the face
  • Foam paintbrush — 1
  • Fine detail paintbrush — 1
  • Battery tea light — 1 per jar
  • Painter's tape — small roll

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands painting a ghost face onto a mason jar

  1. Step 1: Clean the Jar
    Wash and fully dry your mason jar, making sure there's no leftover label residue for the paint to stick to.
  2. Step 2: Apply the White Base Coat
    Use the foam brush to paint the entire outside of the jar white, leaving it slightly translucent so light glows through later. Two thin coats work better than one thick one.
  3. Step 3: Let It Dry Fully
    Give the base coat a full 30 minutes to dry before moving to the face details, otherwise the black paint will smear.
  4. Step 4: Sketch the Face Placement
    Lightly mark where the eyes and mouth will go with a pencil dot, keeping them a bit uneven for a playful, hand-drawn charm.
  5. Step 5: Paint the Ghost Face
    Using the fine detail brush and black paint, paint two oval eyes and a small round "oooh" mouth. Keep the shapes soft and rounded, not sharp.
  6. Step 6: Add the Light
    Once fully dry, drop a battery tea light inside the jar so the face glows softly when lit at night.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph the jar lit at dusk on a porch step — the glow is what really sells this listing.
  • Sell as a set of 3 in varying sizes for a stronger porch display look.
  • Batch-paint a dozen jars in one session, letting them all dry together.
  • Mention "battery tea light included" clearly — it removes a common buyer question.

14. Skeleton Hand Candle Holders

Finished plaster skeleton hand candle holder

This one has a slightly gothic, dramatic look that stands out from the cuter items on this list, giving your shop some range. A plaster skeleton hand holding a candle feels like something from a boutique home store.

It sells well because it looks far more expensive than it is to make, which means a strong profit margin for you.

Selling potential: $22–$38 per piece. Materials cost about $4–$6, sells beautifully on Etsy and at gothic-leaning home decor markets.

What You'll Need

  • Wooden board or reclaimed plank (approximately 36–48 inches tall) — 1
  • Plastic skeleton hands — 6 pairs (12 individual hands)
  • LED pillar candles (battery-operated) — 6
  • Heavy-duty construction adhesive or epoxy — 1 tube
  • Black cheesecloth or creepy cloth — 1 piece
  • White chalk paint or matte acrylic paint — 1 bottle
  • Black acrylic paint or antiquing wax — 1 small bottle
  • Crackle medium (optional, for aged wood effect) — 1 bottle
  • Paintbrushes — 2
  • Fine-grit sandpaper — 1 sheet
  • Hot glue gun and glue sticks — 1
  • Measuring tape and pencil — 1 each

How to Make It — Step by Step

How to Make Skeleton Hand Candle

  1. Step 1: Paint the Wooden Board
    Lightly sand the wooden board, then paint it with white chalk paint. For an aged look like the photo, apply crackle medium before the final coat and allow it to dry completely.
  2. Step 2: Create the Weathered Finish
    Brush black paint or antiquing wax into the cracks and wipe away the excess. Lightly sand the edges to give the board a distressed, vintage appearance.
  3. Step 3: Mark the Candle Positions
    Arrange the LED pillar candles at staggered heights on the board until you're happy with the layout. Mark each position with a pencil.
  4. Step 4: Secure the Candle Supports
    Using heavy-duty construction adhesive or epoxy, glue two matching pieces beneath each marked location with the fingers curved upward to form a sturdy cradle for each candle. Allow the adhesive to cure fully.
  5. Step 5: Drape the Creepy Cloth
    Arrange black cheesecloth across the top of the board, letting it hang naturally around the candle holders. Secure it with small dabs of hot glue where needed.
  6. Step 6: Position the LED Candles
    Place a battery-operated pillar candle into each holder. If needed, use a small amount of removable museum putty to keep the candles securely in place.
  7. Step 7: Add the Finishing Touches
    Touch up any exposed glue, deepen the distressed finish with a little extra black paint if desired, and adjust the cheesecloth for a fuller haunted effect.
  8. Step 8: Display Your Finished Decor
    Lean the finished piece against a wall, on a covered porch, or beside your front door, then switch on the flameless candles to create a spooky Halloween glow.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph it with a lit candle at night for a dramatic, moody product shot.
  • Mix a bigger plaster batch to make 2–3 hands at once since prep time is the same either way.
  • List it in both "Halloween decor" and "gothic home decor" categories for wider reach.
  • Offer a bone-white or aged patina finish as a premium variation.

15. Halloween Vinyl Sticker Sheets

Finished sheet of Halloween vinyl stickers

Vinyl sticker sheets are one of the most overlooked profitable crafts to make and sell — low material cost, quick to produce, and endlessly collectible for buyers. A cute Halloween set of pumpkins, ghosts, and cats appeals to a huge range of ages.

They sell so well because they're a low-commitment impulse buy that customers often order multiples of at once.

Selling potential: $4–$8 per sheet. Materials cost under $1 per sheet, extremely high margin, ideal for Etsy or craft fair grab-and-go tables.

What You'll Need

  • Printable vinyl sticker sheets — 1 pack
  • Craft cutting machine (like a Cricut) — 1
  • Cutting mat sized for your machine — 1
  • Weeding tool — 1
  • Design software (free or included with your machine) — 1
  • Laminate or matte overlay sheets — 1 pack, optional for durability
  • Small squeegee or scraper card — 1

How to Make It — Step by Step

Hands weeding a vinyl sticker design

  1. Step 1: Design Your Sheet
    Arrange your pumpkin, ghost, and black cat designs in your cutting software, sizing each sticker between 1 and 2 inches. Leave a small gap between each shape so cutting stays clean.
  2. Step 2: Print the Sheet
    Print your design onto the printable vinyl sheet using your home printer, letting the ink dry fully for a few minutes before handling.
  3. Step 3: Add the Overlay
    If using a matte laminate overlay, smooth it over the printed sheet with the squeegee to protect it from water and scratches.
  4. Step 4: Load and Cut
    Load the sheet onto your cutting mat and send the design to your machine set to a "print then cut" or sticker-specific setting. Let the machine finish its full pass without interrupting.
  5. Step 5: Weed the Excess
    Use the weeding tool to carefully peel away the extra vinyl around each sticker shape, leaving clean individual designs.
  6. Step 6: Inspect Each Sticker
    Check every sticker for clean edges and full ink coverage, setting aside any with print errors.
  7. Step 7: Package the Sheet
    Slide the finished sheet into a clear cellophane sleeve or a small backing card for a polished, ready-to-ship presentation.

Tips for Selling This Craft

  • Photograph the sheet on a laptop or water bottle to show scale and real-world placement.
  • Batch-print several designs at once since setup time is the same whether you print 1 sheet or 10.
  • Bundle three themed sheets together for a higher-value "sticker pack" listing.
  • These are perfect for craft fair grab-and-go bins near the checkout table.

Want to save this for later? Pin this handy guide!

Halloween Crafts to Make and Sell

Where and How to Sell These Halloween Crafts

Etsy remains the strongest platform for most of the crafts on this list, especially the wreaths, hoop art, and trinket dishes. Buyers there are already searching for handmade products, so you're meeting demand instead of creating it.

Local fall markets and school festivals work especially well for lower-priced, high-volume items like slime, bath bombs, and sticker sheets. These crafts sell better in person because buyers can touch and smell them before deciding.

Good product photography matters more than almost anything else. Natural window light, a clean background, and one clear hero shot per listing will outperform a dozen blurry photos every time.

  • Batch-produce similar crafts together to lower your per-unit time and material cost.
  • Bundle smaller items into gift sets to raise your average order value.
  • List higher-ticket items like wreaths and candle holders early in September, before the seasonal rush peaks.
  • Use short video clips for anything with visual movement, like glowing slime or lit candles — motion sells better than static photos.

Ready to Start Making (and Selling)?

Fifteen crafts is a lot of inspiration, but you don't need to make all of them this week. Pick just one that excites you most and start with a small batch of three or four pieces.

Once you've got your process down, scaling up production gets so much easier. The materials are affordable, the instructions are all right here, and the demand for handmade Halloween goods is real every single year.

So grab your glue gun, pick your favorite from this list, and start making this weekend — your future Etsy shop (or market table) will thank you.

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