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    spooky season

    First look at 2025 Halloween decorations haunting 6 Houston stores

    Jef Rouner
    Jul 23, 2025 | 2:32 pm

    The temperature may be kissing triple digits, but Halloween is starting to fill up the shelves in stores across Houston. For those who want to get a head start on Spooky Season, CultureMap took a quick tour of prominent national retail chains to see which Halloween decor items are already available.

    It will still be a month or so before the seasonal Spirit Halloween stores crop up to haunt the shells of defunct business, but the company has already put out its slate of 2025 animatronics for order. As always, people in the market for a nine-foot scarecrow to scare the neighborhood kids with its ghastly, mechanical motions will find that Spirit is the place to go.

    The store's primary competition in the animatronics market is a bit slower on the draw this year. Home Depot hasn't put out any decorations for sale yet, and Lowe's only has a handful of inflatables. Granted, one of them is a life-sized skeleton DJ with bluetooth that allows people to spin spooky tunes from their living rooms, so at least Lowe's has put its best foot bones forward.

    So far, the best one-stop shop for Halloween stuff is definitely At Home, where ghosts and ghoulish things are already out in force. Some highlights from its catalogue are skeletal yard gnomes, an inflatable black cat that was literally too big to photograph properly, and an excellent selection of faux graveyard decor. One new trend this year seems to be evil plants, including eyeball cacti in pots and plenty of things clearly inspired by Little Shop of Horrors.

    Cracker Barrel is one of the most underrated Halloween dealers around. The restaurant and store brings the same kitchen kitsch to the holiday as they do for Christmas, including Spooky Tree ornaments. While the selection is fairly modest, shoppers won't find a better selection of Halloween salt-and-pepper shakers. The ones that were made out of hanging ceramic bats were especially adorable.

    After the closure of all the Joann Fabrics stores, some might have expected Michael's to step up its Halloween game. While it's still the home of all the charming Lemax miniatures, the rest of their stock proved a bit lacking. On the other hand, it's nice to see so much pink among the black in Halloween decorations. The store also carries a broad spectrum of paint kits and other craft activities for the holiday.

    Lastly, Home Goods has a mishmash of everything, though it leans heavily into cute ceramics. It's also one of the few places shoppers are likely to find Disney Halloween items outside official stores, though that stock is limited. The best way to shop at Home Goods has always been to walk in without any real idea of what to buy and just let the cluttered shelves reveal their treasures. This goes double for Halloween, which offers spooky themed utensils, unique snow globes, grumpy pumpkins, and a few larger pieces to add somber gravity to any home expecting trick 'r treaters.

    Wherever you go, Halloween is peeking around the corner, waiting to banish the heat and usher in cool nights full of scary stories.

    Halloween decor at Cracker Barrel

    Photo by Jef Rouner

    Cracker Barrel offers the same level of kitsch for Halloween that it does for other holidays.

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    respectful design

    New Montrose studio brings bespoke European design to Houston

    Emily Cotton
    Dec 12, 2025 | 12:30 pm
    Armazem Design Home Store
    Photo by Laurie Perez
    Armazem.design is located in the historic Winlow Westheimer buildings.

    Houston’s newest interior design showroom is a dazzling display of how historic preservation and swanky European design can slip into a harmonious dialogue that quietly dismisses the longstanding notion that contemporary furniture has no place within the oftentimes rigid constraints of a traditional home.

    Tucked between The Upper Hand Salon and The Phoenix Pub in the historic Winlow Westheimer buildings, Armazem.design is a lifestyle design boutique carrying elevated European design and architectural solutions from century-old brands such as Arclinia, Lema, Barausse, Foscarini, Gaggeneau, and Sub-Zero Wolf.

    The name Armazem pays homage to founder and principal Jon Fante’s Brazilian roots. Traditionally, armazems were community cornerstones — general stores where people not only shopped but also learned, connected, and built long-term relationships. Appropriate then, that Fante would choose to nestle himself between a salon and a pub, two businesses that are traditional archetypes for familiarity and community.

    Armazem.design is set up like a bespoke home as opposed to a traditional contemporary design concept space. With everything from stately 1920s Victorians to cozy 1930s bungalows still in play in Montrose, setting up shop in a “Houston Browns” brick building from the 1930s — complete with original wide plank floors, exposed brick interior, and open rafter ceilings — allows clients to get a genuine feel for how the product lines work within the framework of these older homes.

    Fante, who was born, raised, and educated as a civil engineer in Brazil, came to the States in 2006 to handle US operations for Florense. Fante retired from his position as CEO in 2017 to start Armazem.design in Chicago. The decision to expand to Houston is something that Fante says was a no-brainer, as Houston has been moving towards a more contemporary style overall.

    “What we are trying to show here is that you don’t have to be in the extremes. You don’t have to be in the extremes of classic American design, which is beautiful, and what is also perceived here as European design, which is super contemporary, which is also beautiful,” Fante tells CultureMap. “There is a breadth of solutions in the inbetween.”

    The buildout for Armazem.design takes clients on a journey through two kitchens, a living room, dining room, generously-appointed closet and dressing space, home office, and casual den space, all outfitted with wall units, complex storage solutions, and warm, comfortable furnishings. Formerly open spaces have been divided into distinct concepts using architectural partitions that can be designed for any space.

    Every aspect of Armazem.design is custom made to order. The design may follow a more European school, but there are wooden elements and handmade objects that protect their environment from the contemporary curse of feeling cold, uninviting, or institutional. With lead times around three to four months, going bespoke here is as accessible as placing orders from mainstream retailers.

    “While there is a focus on kitchens, there are a lot of different products that we bring,” says Fante. “We are a showroom that is focused on interior architectural applications for home. We have partners in doors, partitions, wall paneling, closets — there is a lot. We got this historical place in Montrose and we made it as a home. We want people to walk in and feel like they could live here. It’s very comprehensive.”

    The owners of the building are currently working with the city to gain historical recognition, something that would mean a lot for the neighborhood, and to Fante.

    “We were very lucky to find this space. We preserved every historical element in the showroom — you see these very rustic floors, these floors are almost 100 years old.” Fante discovered more of the historic “Houston Browns” brick during the renovation (the classic Houston brick has been out of production for decades), all hidden behind swathes of drywall. “We ripped that all out to expose the true character of the space,” Fante explains. “Of course we kept the brick.”

    Fante shares that the decision to restore the building led to a phrase from an architect in their Chicago showroom that has remained their motto here in Montrose: “Let’s not bully the space, let’s respect it.” That’s a sentiment that the entire neighborhood can get behind.

    Armazem.design is located at 1911 Westheimer Road and is open Monday through Friday from 9 am-5 pm.

    Armazem Design Home Store

    Photo by Laurie Perez

    Armazem.design is located in the historic Winlow Westheimer buildings.

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