Home / Holidays / Halloween 5 ways to celebrate Halloween while also reducing waste FamVeld/Shutterstock One tip: Check Facebook Marketplace for people giving away or selling their gently-used costumes. By The Cool Down Updated August 20, 2024 FamVeld/Shutterstock Rectangle This post was written by Anna Robertson and originally appeared on The Cool Down. Get ready to break out your creativity, community connection, and conservation spirit with these simple ways to have a spooky Halloween without so much ghoulish waste. Here are five ways to reduce waste on Halloween this year. 1. Host or attend a costume swap My local library is hosting a Halloween costume swap where you can bring costumes your kids have outgrown and swap them for a better fit. You could also host one of these in your neighborhood, with your community organization, church, or school — or why not even make it a fun social event? 2. Shop thrifted for secondhand Halloween gear Check Facebook marketplace or local Facebook groups for people giving away or selling their gently-used Halloween costumes, and stop into thrift stores to find great costumes at a fraction of the price — or even for free. 3. Build your costume around basics you can use again There’s nothing more creative than a homemade Halloween costume, and primary.com has loads of ideas for DIY costumes that build around Primary’s high-quality, organic clothing line that will make great staples after Halloween is over. We created a Percy Jackson costume for our 8-year-old son with an orange T-shirt and jeans from Primary. 4. Don’t throw out your pumpkins! So many communities are offering pumpkin drop offs where you can discard your pumpkin safely. Ask around your community to see if you can drop your gourds somewhere to be composted. 5. Host a candy wrapper collection drive Candy wrappers are now being used to create outdoor furniture and all kinds of things. Terracycle offers a box you can buy to collect old candy wrappers. Our elementary school parent-teacher organization just funded one of these for school, so parents can drop their wrappers in the box. You could fund the purchase of one of these boxes with the money you raise from your sneaker drive! This post was written by Anna Robertson and originally appeared on The Cool Down. The latest Safety 10 surprising holiday toy risks you might not know about Viral & Trending Experts warn: These 5 holiday toys could land your child in the ER—here’s how to keep them safe Viral & Trending Mom hilariously explains why we should all feed our kids dinner before the Thanksgiving meal Holiday Gift Guides The Motherly editor holiday gift guide–what we’re buying for everyone on our lists