Halloween involves carving pumpkins and fruits into Jack-o’-lanterns to scare the evil spirits; this tradition has over the years evolved into a fun and festive activity. One need not wait until October to begin the fun, you can kick-off early with plastic molds from Fruit Mould that allow you to carve fictional and real-life characters without much fuss.

As surprised as you may sound, Fruit Mould has made it possible to mold fruits and vegetables and reshape them while growing in the fields. You can give your pumpkin a Frankenstein’s shape or mutate them into a skull or an alien, if you may.

Fruit Mould makes and distributes plastic molds to users like you and me to help grow pumpkins, melons, and other fruits and veggies in shapes of our choice. Fruit Mould really rose to fame after Seamons, a farmer in Benson, grew Frankenstein’s Monster Pumpkin that went viral online and people wanted to mimic it.

Using the Fruit Mould plastic molds is simple, just place a blooming pumpkin (or any other fruit) inside one of the molds and leave it there. As the pumpkin blooms, the mold squeezes it into shape so you can pluck Frankenstein’s skulls and Trumpkins right from the field itself. When the fruit is ready in the desired shape, unscrew the nuts and bolts holding the mold.

Also Read: 50+ Ways to Make Halloween Pumpkin from Different Materials

Interestingly, reshaping the veggies and fruits using these molds should not diminish the quality or lower the nutritional value. It will simply make your ordinary fruit look extraordinary work of art, ready to rock at Halloween.

Various kinds of molds are available at different prices; for instance, the Frankenstein’s Pumpkin mold starts at $75. For more details and information visit Fruit Mould‘s official website.

Image: Fruit Mould By Khieuware
Image: Fruit Mould
Image: Fruit Mould
Image: Fruit Mould
Image: Fruit Mould By Khieuware
Image: Fruit Mould By Khieuware
Image: Fruit Mould By Khieuware
Image: Fruit Mould By Khieuware

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Atish Sharma is a seasoned journalist, theatre director and PR specialist based in Shimla, India. He boasts over eight years of experience in print, electronic, and digital media, and has played pivotal roles as a field journalist at Hindustan Times. When not weaving a web of words at Homecrux or scouring new tiny houses, you'll discover him immersed in cinema, savouring cult classics, interviewing production designers or embarking on a quest for existential truths, far beyond his fantasy of being a cowboy who never rode a horse.

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