Need a cheap, low-mess way to entertain your little monsters this October? You probably already have the ultimate craft supply hiding in your pantry right now. Brown paper lunch bags offer endless possibilities for spooky, creative fun.
Kids absolutely love transforming ordinary household items into magical creations. Parents appreciate keeping extra cash in their wallets instead of dropping a small fortune at the local craft store. FYI, these spooktacular paper bag Halloween crafts to make with kids double as fantastic fine motor skill exercises.
Ready to turn your kitchen table into a creepy creator’s studio? Grab your safety scissors, hoard your glue sticks, and prepare for some delightfully terrifying family bonding.
1. The Classic Frankenstein Monster Puppet
Frankenstein always steals the show during spooky season. Provide a basic brown lunch sack and watch your little ones transform it into a spectacular green monster. You only need a few basic supplies to bring this iconic Halloween craft to life.
What You Need
- Bright green acrylic paint
- Large googly eyes
- A thick black permanent marker
- Standard craft glue
Paint the entire base of the bag bright green. Brush black paint at the top flap to create his iconic flat haircut. Once the paint dries completely, glue on the eyes and draw some gnarly scars across his cheeks.
Pro-Parent Tip
Use a thick sponge brush instead of a traditional paintbrush. Sponge brushes cover the paper surface faster and frustrate impatient toddlers much less! Plus, stamping the paint builds crucial hand-eye coordination.
2. Flying Paper Bag Bats
Want to decorate your ceiling with a colony of adorable bloodsuckers? These flying bats look fantastic hanging from doorways or spinning gently over the dining room table. Kids get a huge kick out of watching their creations “fly” around the house.
What You Need
- Black construction paper
- Black washable paint
- White gel pen or crayon
- Clear fishing line
Coat the paper bag completely in black paint. Cut two large, scalloped wings out of the construction paper and glue them securely to the back of the bag. Use the white gel pen to draw two tiny fangs on the flap.
Pro-Parent Tip
Punch a small hole at the top of the bat’s head. Tie a loop of clear fishing line through the hole to hang your bats. They will flutter realistically every time the air conditioner kicks on.
3. Friendly Ghost Luminaries
Set a spooky mood on your front porch with these glowing apparitions. These luminaries guide trick-or-treaters directly to your candy bowl. They also look brilliant lining a dark hallway during a spooky kids’ party.
What You Need
- White paper lunch bags
- Black Sharpie marker
- Battery-operated LED tea lights
- A handful of rocks or sand
Draw large, howling ghost faces on the front of the white bags. Drop a small handful of sand or a heavy rock into the bottom of the bag to prevent the wind from blowing it away. Turn on your LED tea light and drop it inside.
Pro-Parent Tip
NEVER use real candles for this craft. Paper bags catch fire almost instantly. Stick exclusively to battery-operated lights to ensure your family stays safe while enjoying the spooky ambiance.
4. Wicked Witch Hand Puppets
Encourage imaginative play by helping your kids design their very own wicked witch. Puppets naturally spark storytelling, so get ready to hear some hilarious spells and cackles. This project encourages serious creativity and silly character voices.
What You Need
- Green and purple paint
- Green or purple yarn
- Black cardstock
- A small twig from the yard
Paint the face area green and the body purple. Cut a pointy hat out of the black cardstock and glue it firmly to the top of the witch’s head. Cut short strips of yarn and glue them directly under the hat to create frizzy witch hair.
Pro-Parent Tip
Glue the small yard twig diagonally across the lower half of the bag to act as a miniature broomstick. Your kids will fly their witches around the living room all afternoon.
5. Creepy Crawly Paper Bag Spiders
Do you shudder at the sight of eight-legged freaks? Prepare yourself, because kids adore building these oversized arachnids. These chunky spiders look incredible sitting on bookshelves or hiding in corners to jump-scare unsuspecting siblings.
What You Need
- Black pipe cleaners
- Old newspaper pages
- Stapler
- Multiple pairs of googly eyes
Crumple up the old newspaper and stuff it inside the paper bag until it looks nice and plump. Fold the open end of the bag down and staple it shut securely. Paint the entire stuffed pouch black.
Pro-Parent Tip
Poke four holes on each side of the stuffed bag. Thread the black pipe cleaners into the holes and bend them sharply at the “knees” so your spider stands up entirely on its own.
6. Jack-o’-Lantern Treat Bags
Hosting a Halloween classroom party? Ditch the expensive plastic buckets. These customized pumpkin bags hold plenty of candy and cost pennies to make. Kids love personalizing their pumpkins with goofy or scary expressions.
What You Need
- Orange acrylic paint
- Black paper cutouts (triangles and zig-zags)
- Hole punch
- Green ribbon
Paint the bags orange and let them dry overnight. Hand your kids the black paper shapes and let them glue on their own unique Jack-o’-Lantern faces. Punch two holes at the top and thread the green ribbon through to create a sturdy carrying handle.
Pro-Parent Tip
Write each child’s name on the back of their pumpkin bag with a thick black marker. This prevents serious meltdowns when the kids inevitably mix up their candy piles later in the evening.
7. Masking Tape Mummy Bags
Looking for a craft that requires zero drying time? This mummy project avoids messy paint entirely. Little hands get an excellent fine motor workout ripping and sticking the tape.
What You Need
- A large roll of masking tape
- Large yellow googly eyes
- Dark brown crayon
Color a small dark rectangle on the flap of the bag using the brown crayon. Glue the yellow googly eyes directly into the center of that dark patch. Tear off strips of masking tape and wrap them randomly around the entire bag.
Pro-Parent Tip
Crisscross the tape at bizarre angles to make the mummy look authentic and ancient. Leave a small gap right where you glued the eyes so your mummy can peek out at the world.
8. Count Dracula Vampire Puppets
Invite the world’s most famous vampire to your crafting table. This Dracula puppet looks incredibly dapper and features a dramatic, pop-up cape. Watch your kids practice their best Transylvanian accents.
What You Need
- White and black paint
- Red construction paper
- White paper scraps
- Red marker
Paint a pale white face on the top flap and a black suit on the bottom section. Cut out a dramatic, scalloped cape from the red construction paper and attach it to the back. Snip two tiny white triangles for fangs and glue them directly under his mouth.
Pro-Parent Tip
Use the red marker to draw a tiny trickle of “blood” dripping from one of the fangs. Kids find this slightly gross detail absolutely hilarious, IMO.
9. Miniature Haunted House Dioramas
Combine architectural design with creepy aesthetics. Older kids particularly excel at this craft because it requires spatial thinking. They get to design an entire spooky room inside a simple paper sack.
What You Need
- Scissors
- Halloween stickers
- Cotton balls
- Crayons and markers
Cut a large square window out of the front of the paper bag. Leave the bag standing upright to create a 3D room. Stretch the cotton balls until they look like wispy spiderwebs and glue them inside the corners of the bag.
Pro-Parent Tip
Hand over a sheet of spooky Halloween stickers. Let your children populate their haunted houses with sticker ghosts, bats, and skeletons. They can draw peeling wallpaper and creaky floorboards on the inside walls using their crayons.
10. Spooky Black Cat Treat Holders
Every witch needs her trusty feline companion. These black cat crafts look sleek, mysterious, and surprisingly adorable. They serve perfectly as table centerpieces or party favor bags.
What You Need
- Black paint
- Pink and yellow construction paper
- White colored pencil
- Glue stick
Cover the bag entirely in black paint. Cut two large yellow almond shapes for the eyes and a tiny pink triangle for the nose. Glue the facial features onto the bag and use the white colored pencil to sketch out long, sweeping whiskers.
Pro-Parent Tip
Cut two triangle shapes out of the top opening of the bag to create the cat’s pointy ears. This simple alteration instantly transforms the rectangular sack into a recognizable feline silhouette.
11. Nighttime Spooky Owl Puppets
Bring the creatures of the night indoors. Owls give us that perfect autumnal, eerie vibe. This craft utilizes fun textures to mimic realistic bird feathers.
What You Need
- Brown paper bags (no paint needed!)
- Paper cupcake liners
- Orange construction paper
- Faux craft feathers
Flatten two paper cupcake liners and glue them onto the bag flap to create huge, staring owl eyes. Cut a sharp orange triangle beak and place it right between the liners. Glue a handful of faux craft feathers onto the belly of the bag.
Pro-Parent Tip
Draw small black dots in the center of the cupcake liners for pupils. If you lack faux feathers, simply cut U-shapes out of scrap paper and layer them on the bag’s belly like scales.
12. Creepy Zombie Hand Bags
Want a craft that doubles as a bizarre keepsake? Kids grow so fast, and capturing their handprints provides a fun memory. This zombie craft perfectly blends sweet childhood milestones with gross Halloween fun.
What You Need
- Bright green construction paper
- Pencil
- Red washable paint
- Brown paper bag
Trace your child’s hand and wrist onto the green construction paper using the pencil. Cut out the green handprint and glue it to the front of the bag so it looks like it is reaching upward. Dip their thumbs in the red washable paint and stamp “bloody” fingerprints all over the bag.
Pro-Parent Tip
Make sure you wash those red, paint-covered thumbs immediately. Red acrylic paint notoriously stains everything it touches, and you really do not want a real-life horror scene on your living room rug.
13. Full-Head Werewolf Masks
Scale up the fun by swapping the lunch sack for a massive paper grocery bag. These wearable masks turn ordinary kids into howling beasts. They provide hours of imaginative roleplay and backyard chasing.
What You Need
- Large brown paper grocery bags
- Scissors
- Brown markers
- Faux craft fur
Slip the large grocery bag over your child’s head temporarily and gently mark the eye placement with a pencil. Remove the bag and cut out two large eye holes so they can see safely. Let the kids scribble messy brown “fur” all over the bag with their markers.
Pro-Parent Tip
Cut out a large semi-circle near the bottom front of the bag to give their mouths and noses plenty of breathing room. Glue small patches of faux craft fur above the eye holes to create bushy, aggressive werewolf eyebrows.
14. Mix-and-Match Monster Mash Bags
Sometimes you need to abandon the instructions and let chaos reign. This open-ended activity encourages total creative freedom. Prepare yourself for multi-eyed, asymmetrical, wonderfully weird monster creations.
What You Need
- Every random craft supply you own
- Leftover buttons
- Pipe cleaners, yarn, and glitter
- Lots of glue
Dump your miscellaneous craft supplies right into the center of the table. Hand each child a blank brown paper bag and declare a monster-making contest. Challenge them to use the weirdest combinations of materials they can find.
Pro-Parent Tip
Praise the process, not just the final product. Ask them questions about their monster’s name, its favorite food, and its special superpowers. You will unlock an entirely new level of imaginative storytelling.
Wrap Up Your Spooky Crafting Session
Crafting together provides the absolute best way to celebrate the chilly autumn season. These simple materials prove you do not need an endless budget to spark serious joy and creativity. Your kids gain confidence, develop their motor skills, and create decorations they genuinely feel proud to display.
Grab a stack of brown bags during your next grocery run and start building your own creepy collection. Display their masterpieces on the mantle, use them for trick-or-treating, or put on a haunted puppet show in the living room. Have a wonderfully wicked time getting messy together! 🎃
