
Some clever neighbors blended the frivolous with the useful by carving their house number into one of their pumpkins. / MyLittleBird photo.

An artist neighbor revealed the character inside this pumpkin. Displayed on a brick pillar right next to a city sidewalk, it lasted only one night . . .

. . . to be replaced a day or two later by this somehow less-friendly fellow. / MyLittleBird photo.

Abundance is clearly the theme of this display. The squash and gourds are in a protected doorway in front of the big double doors (the display does not block the door). / MyLittleBird photo.

Pale pumpkins and gourds line the front steps of a 19th-century brick mansion. / MyLittleBird photo.

The red-veined pumpkin on the left is a hybrid known as the “One Too Many” pumpkin, because it looks as though it’s been filled to bursting. / MyLittleBird photo.

On the other side of the mummy doorway, the spiders in the “rigging” of this spider web were fashioned from paint and water bottles. / MyLittleBird photo.

The whimsy here appealed to us, with a witch’s hat on each cast-iron newel post. / MyLittleBird photo.

And, to the right of the witches’ hats, these glittery spiders made a home on a boxwood. / MyLittleBird photo.

This freestanding fortune teller makes her home on the sidewalk outside a house in Georgetown. But there’s more to come . . .

Beyond the fortune teller, an ambitious Georgetown real estate agent has turned her family’s abode into the “Nightmare in Georgetown.” Good for business? One would think not! / MyLittleBird photo.

Ghosts surround a pumpkin tree at the Great Jack O’Lantern Blaze at Van Cortlandt Manor in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. / Photo © Bryan Haeffele

A T-Rex dinosaur featured at the Great Jack O’ Lantern Blaze at Van Cortlandt Manor in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. / Photo © Tom Nycz

The Tunnel O’ Pumpkin Love is a popular photo op at the Great Jack O’ Lantern Blaze at Van Cortlandt Manor in
Croton-on-Hudson, New York. / Photo © Bryan Haeffele