El Dorado News-Times

Harry Potter party crafts thrive years after books

- By Rose Shilling

For crafty Harry Potter fans, throwing a party themed to the stories can be the ultimate DIY labor of love.

Two excuses for throwing a Harry Potter party are coming soon: Halloween and the November release of the franchise's latest movie, "Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d." Online instructio­ns can help you make stuffed or sculpted recreation­s of the movie's magical beasts, including Nifflers and Bowtruckle­s, and the main character's creature-toting suitcase is inspiring cakes and party decoration­s.

But want-to-be witches and wizards don't need excuses to put a Harry Potter spin on kid and adult birthday parties, quinceañer­as, brunches, housewarmi­ngs, gender reveals for expected babies, bacheloret­te festivitie­s, movie-watching marathons and Christmas get-togethers.

Additions to the vast online trove of Harry Potter craft ideas keep coming, even though the original book series ended about 10 years ago. You can draw messenger owls on white balloons with notes attached, make wands from carryout chopsticks and hot glue, and create "floating" candles with battery-powered lights poking from toilet paper rolls painted white. The candles, with drips made of glue, hang overhead on hard-to-see plastic string to imitate an enchanted ceiling at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

At Debra Hawkins' party for her daughter's eighth birthday in Lehi, Utah, she stuffed small, brown, constructi­on-paper witch hats with candy-coated chocolates in green, red, blue or yellow to represent the colors of Hogwarts' four student houses. Kids tore into the hats to reveal their house assignment­s, a riff on the stories' Sorting Hat ceremony.

"You can do a Harry Potter party completely from scratch and make absolutely everything yourself, or you can find all the things that other people have done and roll with it that way," says Hawkins. "That's the really nice thing about so many people loving Harry Potter: There's just so much out there."

Harry Potter ideas and tutorials are one of the biggest draws to Angie Jensen's crafting blog, Jonesing2C­reate , beating out her Star Wars party posts, she says.

To keep a party manageable, veteran planners suggest choosing just a few crafts.

Jensen focused on activities rather than perfect goody bags or decoration­s. "I'm not a Pinterest mom," she says. "If I'm not having fun anymore, then I'm out."

For a version of the wizard sport Quidditch, she made pool-noodle brooms and attached hula hoops to plastic plumbing tubes stuck in her California yard.

To make a Dementor piñata, she taped a treatfille­d paper bag on top of a pool noodle with Halloween prop hands attached. A black shirt covered the noodle, and a black skirt served as the Dementor's cloak, hiding the bag. The supplies cost $3. "That was a super-easy one," she says.

Hawkins hung stonepatte­rned paper on the walls for a Hogwarts Castle feel, and affixed potion labels made by her designer husband on thrift-store bottles filled with colored water.

She shares the labels on her blog, Housewife Eclectic, along with other printable files, including paper house ties and Hogwarts acceptance letters. Many graphic designers and hobbyists offer free or inexpensiv­e downloads, including Platform 9 ¾ signs, and labels for licorice wands, chocolate frogs and other wizard candy.

For an adult viewing party of the first "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them," Hawkins focused more on decoration­s and snacks. But even adults wanted to participat­e in a house sorting ceremony, she says.

She made mini Sorting Hats by pressing chocolate chews into cone shapes, and then putting them on cupcakes filled with colored candy.

Selah Hovda of Phoenix used supplies from around the house and shopped early for deals for her son's eighth birthday party. She made a papier-mache Sorting Hat with a cereal-box base for about $5, passing up one that cost about $50 at a store. And she created a version of the screaming Mandrake plant from plastic foam wrapped in twine with fake green leaves. "Dollar Tree is my best friend," she says.

Her son enjoyed making wands for favors, adding bits of yarn and pipe cleaners to dowel rods, and painting his creations. "He thought it was pretty cool because he was able to put his own little flair on that," she says.

The wands were guests' favorite. "All night they were having little battles," she says.

 ?? Photos by Selah Hovda/AP ?? Crafting: This photo provided by Selah Hovda shows a Sorting Hat made by Hovda for her son's Harry Potter-themed birthday party in Phoenix, Ariz. The paper-mache Sorting Hat was made with a base of cereal boxes and cost about $5.
Photos by Selah Hovda/AP Crafting: This photo provided by Selah Hovda shows a Sorting Hat made by Hovda for her son's Harry Potter-themed birthday party in Phoenix, Ariz. The paper-mache Sorting Hat was made with a base of cereal boxes and cost about $5.

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