Halloween Scare Tactics

Vortex with person walking through it Photo: Jaisen Crockett

A good haunted house must be an complete sensory experience.

dolls piled up in a haunted house Photo: Jaisen Crockett

Much like clowns, dolls have a scary quality to them, especially when piled up like this.

Little girl on mom's lap walking through the house Photo: Jaisen Crockett

Eerie scenes like this can be set up as vignettes for your guests to view while walking through.

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Ready to upgrade your home from a stop on the trick or treat trail to a Halloween destination? Forget the pumpkin in the window, and transform your house—or maybe just your basement—into a scary holiday attraction for the entire neighborhood to enjoy. Timothy Haskell, creator of New York City's most popular haunted house—dubbed by many as the scariest in town—offers up some tricks of the trade.

Do Your Research
In order for your haunted house to be scary, it's important to know what frightens people. So, poll your neighbors. "We ask questions like 'what do you fear the most?' or 'have you had any personal paranormal experiences?'" Haskell says. Do your research; there might be a frightening legend or story about your hometown that you can use to theme your haunted house.

Haskell's Five Must-Have Haunted House Features

1. Lots of twists and turns: People always should fear what lurks around the corner.

2. Darkly lit rooms: Everything is scarier in the dark.

3. Tons of strobe lights: Everything is more distorted, and thus more menacing, when you can't get a clean look at it because the strobe lights are skewing your vision.

4. Clowns: For some reason, everyone is terrified of these guys. Stick them in a room with some twisted circus music and no one wants to go in.

5. Sensory stimulation: Don't just assault the eyes; explore ways for people to hear, smell, feel and even taste the experience. If you put someone in a dark room with the sound of scurrying rats, the smell of a damp basement, and some wiry little tails stuck to the walls at ankle length to simulate what feels like a rat, as far as they are concerned there is a rat in there with them.

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