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Wednesday, October 1, 2025

DIY Miniature Haunted House (Foam Board or Dollhouse Kit)


Alright spooky crew — let’s make some Halloween magic. Today we’re building a Miniature Haunted House that can either:

  • rise from the ashes of foam board scraps (for full DIY bragging rights), or

  • start life as a sweet little wooden dollhouse kit (that we’re going to absolutely ruin in the best way possible).

Both versions end up looking creepy, crooked, and oh-so-haunted. Ready to scare up some charm? Let’s go. 👻


Supplies You’ll Need

This isn’t one of those “if you don’t own a laser cutter, forget it” kind of projects. Everything here is basic craft store stuff:


Path A — Foam Board Build (From Scratch)

Step 1 — Build the Shell

  • Cut your foam board pieces:

    • Front wall: 4" × 5"

    • Back wall: 4" × 5"

    • Side walls (2): 3" × 5"

    • Roof panels (2): 4.5" × 3.5"

    • Base: 6" × 6"

  • Glue the walls together with hot glue at 90° angles. Reinforce inside corners with craft sticks.

  • Join the two roof panels along one edge to make a ridge, then glue on top. Don’t worry if it’s a little wonky — that’s part of the haunted charm.


Step 2 — Windows & Door

  • Sketch out mismatched windows and a crooked door.

  • Cut them out with a sharp craft knife — jagged edges add character.

  • Glue the acetate or parchment paper inside for glowing windows.

  • For extra spook factor, cut the door out and glue it back in slightly ajar.

  • Add a scrap of foam above the door for a sagging porch roof.



Step 3 — Paint It Haunted

  • Prime the entire house black (inside and out).

  • Dry brush gray across walls and roof for aged wood/stone texture.

  • Thin some brown paint with water and streak downward from windows and roof edges.

  • Stipple mossy green in corners and along the roof.


Step 4 — Light It Up


Step 5 — Haunted Yard


Step 6 — Finishing Touches



Path B — Dollhouse Kit Hack (Fast & Fun)

Step 1 — Assemble the Kit

Assemble the wooden dollhouse kit per instructions.

Step 2 — Distress It

  • Remove or break trim.

  • Cut or enlarge a window.

  • Sand edges jagged.

Step 3 — Paint It Creepy

Step 4 — Glow & Yard


Step 5 — Display Time

Set it on your shelf or in the middle of a Halloween village scene. Lights off, LEDs on — boom, haunted glory.




Pro Tips

  • Imperfect cuts = more haunted vibes.

  • Always paint the foam edges black.

  • Make 2–3 houses in different sizes for a full haunted street scene.


FAQs About Making a Miniature Haunted House

Can I use cardboard instead of foam board?
Yes, but keep in mind that cardboard warps more easily with paint and glue. Foam board gives you straighter walls and cleaner cuts. If cardboard is what you have on hand, reinforce it with extra layers and prime it really well.

Do I need special lights, or will any fairy lights work?
Any battery-operated fairy lights or LED tea lights work fine. Just avoid ones that get hot (old-school bulbs) since we’re working with paper, foam, and glue. Flicker-style LEDs add that spooky candle vibe.

How do I stop the foam board edges from showing white?
After cutting, run a black marker or a bit of black acrylic paint along the exposed foam. This seals the edge and keeps it from looking “unfinished.”

What if I don’t have air-dry clay?
No problem — you can cut gravestones from foam scraps, or even carve them out of thick cardboard. For pumpkins, try beads or wooden knobs painted orange if clay isn’t an option.

Can I skip the moss and still have it look good?
Absolutely — moss adds realism, but you can use paint instead. Stipple greens and browns around the base of the house and roofline to fake the mossy effect.

How long does this project take?
If you’re doing the foam board version: 2–3 hours (plus drying time for clay or resin puddles). If you’re hacking a dollhouse kit: about 1–2 hours, depending on how many spooky extras you add.

Is this safe for kids to help with?
Yes — with supervision. Let kids paint pumpkins, glue moss, or sprinkle dirt. Leave knife cuts, hot glue, and resin to the adults.

What scale should I aim for if I want multiple houses?
Stick to bases around 6" × 6" and house walls 4–5" tall. That way, if you make a few, they’ll all look proportional when displayed together.

Do I have to add lighting?
Nope! It looks great even without lights, but the glow makes it 10× more magical. If you skip lights, lean into bold paint contrast and mossy details.

Can I use this as part of a Christmas village later?
Yes! Swap pumpkins for mini wreaths, add fake snow instead of moss, and string tiny Christmas lights around the house. Voilà — haunted house turned winter cottage.


And there you go — a DIY Haunted House that looks like it belongs in a miniature horror movie set. Whether you built it from scratch or haunted a dollhouse kit, the result is one-of-a-kind.


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