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Curb Appeal: 15 Ideas to Steal from Brooklyn for Halloween

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All over my neighborhood, front yards and stoops, planters and tree wells look lush. Just another reason to love the Upper West Side. Could there be a prettier place to live in New York City?

As it turns out, yes. That place is Brooklyn Heights, which gets all dressed up for Halloween. Photographer Doug Thompson and I spent a blissful afternoon wandering around Brooklyn Heights, shooting whatever we could see from the sidewalk. You'd think there must be a competition going on. We did find one yard filled with plastic tombstones, skeletons, and a moth-eaten rat (it was on State Street, and sorry, you won't see it here), but almost everything else showed an unerringly sophisticated use of color and texture. Read on for 15 Halloween ideas to steal from Brooklyn Heights for your own garden:

Photography by Douglas Lyle Thompson for Gardenista.

Black Backdrop:

brooklyn-heights-halloween-pumpkin-stoop-gardenista

Above: On the stoop at one townhouse on Sidney Place, a restrained black planter matches the black door and lends a Halloween air. Gourds and a pumpkin pop against the dark backdrop.

brooklyn-heights-halloween-grasses-window-box-gardenista

Above: A black window box at the same townhouse. Like the planter by the door, it resembles a miniature prairie grassland.

Ghostly White:

brooklyn-heights-white-halloween-curb-appeal-gardenista

Above: Caladium seem to be everywhere these days, and no wonder. They're hardy enough for an urban environment, and come in a wide range of colors. These in terra cotta planters on Sidney Place stick to white and green, and must be a ghostly sight after dark. 

Vivacious Vines:

Brooklyn Heights stoop container plants autumn ; Gardenista

Above: Vegetation has priority on this stoop: lush coleus (coleus went nuts this summer), sweet potato vine, and a spreading tuberous begonia with white blossoms. Guests must circumnavigate the twining residents. (Watch your ankles.)

Plants on the Loose:

Brooklyn Heights stoop Halloween pumpkin vine container plants ; Gardenista

Above: It's hard to believe that Sidney Place is only one short block. Here's one more on Sidney, where the vines are given free rein. At the foot of the steps, a pretty vine escapes from a pot of Japanese anemones, grasses, and pansies. 

Unexpected Heat:

Stoop with black planters, Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: On Henry Street, one block closer to the river, diverse plantings on a stoop and in a tree well. With a surprise . . .

Pumpkin, black planter with peppers, Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: The pumpkin and chrysanthemum are to be expected, but check out the orange peppers on the right. And is that bamboo at the back?

Purple People Eaters:

Planted tree well, Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: Purple works for Halloween, too (when doesn't purple work?). A tree well combines boxwood with fuzzy celosia and lavender-edged ornamental kale—it wouldn't be Brooklyn without kale. Luckily, Brooklyn Heights dogs are so well mannered they curb themselves.

Monster Plants:

Philodendron on stoop, Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: Feed me! Don't be afraid to go big in fall. This variegated elephant ear at the top of the steps may well scare off pint-sized trick-or-treaters.

New York City's Mascot:

Rat on ledge, Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: It's rare that a rat is a welcome sighting in New York, but this guy on Henry Street is more charming than scary.

Ghoulish Gourds:

Pumpkins and squash on stoop, Joralemon Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: Joralemon Street is busier than the side streets, but just as nicely decorated. This stoop has some especially well chosen gourds and pumpkins.

Rampant Roses:

Window box, coleus, Joralemon Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: On Joralemon Street, a climbing rose laden with orange rose hips has decided to ramble over the railing and across a trellis. In this section of the street the pavement switches to cobblestones: I loved the sound of car tires rumbling along the block. 

Closeup window box, coleus, Joralemon Street, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: At the same townhouse, more coleus run rampant in window boxes, along with some late-blooming fuchsias. The chartreuse-colored leaves are from the unstoppable "Wasabi" coleus, a recent variety that is the gift that keeps on giving. (Need a cutting? I still have plenty—from a single plant.)

Mini Pumpkins:

Window box, mums and grasses, Garden Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: A felicitous mix of plants at a house on Garden Place. Homeowners around here don't hesitate to rip out tired petunias or ragged geraniums when summer's bloom is done, and start anew with fresh fall plantings.

Closeup window box, mums and grasses, Garden Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: These boxes fit the season, with their shades of orange, ivy, fuzzy grasses—and yes, mini pumpkins tucked in at the base.

Hawkish Owls:

Window box, iron owl, Garden Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: While Michelle loves Halloween, she confesses to hating the color orange. It's a conundrum. How about rusty-orange, then, like this window-box owl?

Black Cats:

Brooklyn Heights Halloween curb appeal black cat ; Gardenista

Above: Black cats are always in fashion on Halloween. Get one if you can. I spied this spooky character peeking around his front door on Willow Place, and quickly motioned to Doug to grab a shot.

Edith Wharton's Halloween:

Window boxes and facade, Columbia Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista  

Above: A few blocks over on Columbia Place, a particularly handsome and well-kept townhouse has covetable stone window boxes.

Window box, Columbia Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: Here, the Casper-like shapes of peace lilies flit above white-and-green caladium leaves; boxwood and dwarf cypress fill in the gaps.

Halloween-to-Thanksgiving Decor:

Stoop, Columbia Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: Our last stop on Columbia Place had an urn and window boxes that suited their spaces perfectly (aided by the lacy curtains behind).

Window box with croton and asparagus fern, Columbia Place, Brooklyn Heights I Gardenista

Above: A mix of orange-and-gold crotons, mums, and asparagus ferns will look just as good on Thanksgiving, as long as the weather stays mild. That's the risk you run putting houseplants in outdoor fall arrangements. But isn't that half the fun of it?

For more Halloween decorating ideas, check out:

N.B.: This is an update of a post originally published on Oct. 21, 2014.

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