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At 2012’s East Bay Mini Maker Faire at Park Day School in Oakland, one room became resplendent.
Glen A. Larson could be considered an American hero. He is the television producer responsible for bringing such gems as Battlestar Galactica and Knight Rider to the small screen. The Larson Scanner, named in his honor, can be used for your costume, bike, R/C car, case mod, or — as we did — the Cylon jack-o’-lantern.
A monster cutout in your window blocks some of the light behind it and casts a spooky shadow.
Here’s a classic toy reimagined for you to make just in time for Halloween candy-giving and party fun. It’s the Mad Monster Candy Snatch game, which combines the nerve-wracking dexterity of the old classic Operation game (BZZZZZT!) with a fun monster head–shaped candy dispenser. Make those little goblins earn their treats with this tricky game!
Scare the wits out of visitors with this pneumatic spook
Create your own custom spooky halloween skull treats using this configurable, parametric 3D printed mold form. Created in OpenSCAD by combining a scanned skull with a parametric box to create a food-safe silicone chocolate skull mold.
Tired of the same humdrum pumpkin carving routine year after year?
Build a simple light-sensing circuit that switches an LED on when the lights go out.
Just peel and stick LEDs, sensors, and even microcontrollers, to make instant circuits.
Make a spider web shooter that’ll surely spread the creeps.
Nothing signifies a rousing shindig like the distinct sound of splattering vomit, especially when it's a Halloween party based on the infamous horror film The Exorcist!
I worked out a system that lets you control all your animated Halloween props with a single microcontroller.
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