Edmonton

Mother-daughter team take Halloween house parties to 'crazy' extremes

For Chelsea Dufresne and her mother Penny, Halloween house parties are serious business.

Penny and Chelsea Dufresne are constantly planning their next ultimate bash

'It really allows us to be creative'

6 years ago
Duration 1:24
Chelsea Dufresne and her mother transform their home into a storybook-themed Halloween party.

For Chelsea Dufresne and her mother, Penny, Halloween house parties are serious business.

Every year they pick a theme and throw a bash at their home in Edmonton's Lewis Estates neighbourhood, opening the doors to friends and family.  

But this is no ordinary gathering. Mother and daughter are radical about their ornately decorated shindigs.

Bargain store skeletons and cotton batten cobwebs just won't do.

"There is a lot going on," Chelsea said in an interview Friday with CBC Radio's Edmonton AM.

"We're planning next year at the same time were planning this year. It's constant."

"We're just kind of crazy about Halloween."

Mother and daughter spend hundreds of hours over the course of the year preparing for the bash, relying on their construction, design and costume-making skills to decorate every nook and cranny of the family's two-storey home.

The Dufresne family spends hundreds of hours setting up their house for a one-of-a-kind Halloween party. Each room is adorned with handcrafted figurines, props, billboards and other contraptions.

With impressive attention to detail, each room is adorned with handcrafted figurines, props, billboards and other contraptions.

Chelsea gives her mother a lot of the credit.

"If we come up with an idea, we brainstorm it and then we engineer it," she said.

"If she has to weld something, she welds, if she has to cut something out of wood, she will. If she has to construct something out of clay, she will do it.

"And it's just so cool."

They've done more than a dozen themes over the years, including villains and murder mysteries.

This year, they settled on a story-time theme and constructed a series of fairy tale vignettes, representing more than 20 books and stories throughout their house.

This year the house has story-time theme with a series of fairy tale vignettes throughout.

"We try to encompass as much of the house as possible," Penny said.

"Chelsea always gets mad with, because I come up with crazy plans for the next year before the party has even happened. She says, 'Don't talk to me about the next party, I'm still planning this one.' " 

Hallmarks of the party are the photo backdrop and a scavenger hunt of puzzles and riddles tailored toward the theme.

Successfully completing the hunt reveals the theme for the following year, so guests have ample time to plan their costumes.

For Chelsea, the magic is in the details and the months of preparation.

"We go hard around July. That's when we really start talking about the specifics of what we're doing, and how were going to accomplish it. But we talk about it all year.

"It's an outlet for our creativity."

Their mutual obsession with Halloween started when Chelsea was just a girl. Every year, after much deliberation and collaboration, Penny would sew Chelsea's costume.

It's something they both missed as Chelsea got older — and both became increasingly weary with the more raucous Halloween parties they'd been attending.  

"In 2014, I was like, I don't want to go to bars anymore," Chelsea said.

"We're both introverts. So we were thinking, if we don't want to go other people's parties, maybe we should get people to come to our place."

Every room in the Dufresne family's Lewis Estates neighbourhood home has been decked out for the Halloween house party.