Magical Harry Potter Party

Harry Potter Party

Most kids love Harry Potter and all things magical. Actually, I should restate that… Everybody loves Harry Potter! This party was quite a bit of work, but one of the best we’ve ever had. We needed a lot of extra adult help, so we recruited grandparents, aunts, uncles, and a few neighbors to be Hogwarts teachers. They all dressed up like their assigned character. It really was so much fun! Here’s what we did.

Invitations

Our invitations were mailed from Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. They were acceptance letters to the school, followed by information about the party. If you have an owl, you could ask him to deliver the letters for you. I’ve attached our version here.  Hogwarts Acceptance Letter

Party Agenda

As the children arrived, the kids stopped at Gringotts Bank. They received a bag of 10 gold-painted rocks (gravel) to use for their shopping in Diagon Alley. They then boarded the Hogwarts Express and headed to Diagon Alley.

Hogwarts Express

Our party was in January so we needed to hold it indoors. We decided that we would need a larger space than our home could offer, so we held the party in our church gym. The church has large rolling carts for folding chairs and tables. We turned one of these carts into a train. I sketched the front of a train engine and taped it to the handle of the cart. We left one table on the cart, and the kids sat on in. My husband pushed the passengers all around the gym (a few at a time, as they arrived) until they reached Diagon Alley. The passengers exited the train and went shopping!

Hogwarts Students

Diagon Alley

We turned one section of the gym into Diagon Alley. (You could certainly use one room in your house or one section of your yard.)

Our shops included:

Ollivander’s (Maker of Fine Wands)

I purchased wooden dowels, cut them into four 12-18” sticks and painted them to look like wands. My kids helped with this and had a lot of fun making each one unique. We used lots of different colors- including a lot of gold and silver.  Here’s another fun idea for wands from The Crafty Teacher. Make Your Own Magic Wand

Flourish & Blotts Bookseller (Quills)

We made each guest a quill by hot gluing a feather to a ball-point pen. We also gave them a little grade card with their list of classes.

Magical Menagerie (Pet Store)

One of the stores in Diagon Alley is the pet shop. We let the children each make a puppet for their pet. These were brown paper bag puppets with paper print-outs I found online. The choices were a frog, owl, cat, or mouse. The kids colored, pasted, and named their pet.  When we held this party a second time, I bought stuffed animals (owls, cats, and toads) for the Menagerie.

Harry Potter Robe

Madam Malkin’s Robes for All Occasions

A month before the party, I recruited my mother-in-law to help me prepare. She is an excellent seamstress and a good sport about helping with my wild ideas. Together, we made over 30 black robes in various sizes. These were about as simple as they could be. We went through her boxes of old fabric and used anything we could find that was black. I went to the fabric store and bought all the black clearance fabric. We even cut up a few black tablecloths. We bought a roll of black ribbon and a bunch of cheap black shoelaces for the ties at the neck. We just made up a pattern from an old Halloween cloak pattern. It was basically a front, back, and two sleeves. We didn’t mess with collars or zippers. If the fabric didn’t fray, we didn’t hem it. Here’s an example.

After the children finished their shopping in Diagon Alley, they went to the Banquet Room at Hogwarts. There, they were sorted into houses and enjoyed a “Welcome Back to School Banquet”.

 

Sorting Hat/House Crests

I went to Google images and printed the crest of each Hogwarts House on cardstock: Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, and Slytherin. My kids colored the crests and we attached a safety pin to each. During the party, we had each guest sit on a chair and put the sorting hat on. My husband acted as the Sorting Hat’s voice and declared the House appointment for each guest. We then pinned the appropriate crest to the child’s robe. This assigned each guest to a “team”, which they stayed with as they rotated from class to class throughout the party. My sister owned an actual costume Sorting Hat, but you could use any witch’s hat.

House Crest

Banquet Room

I enlisted the help of two aunts to make the food for the night. Earlier in the day I made two bowls of bread dough. That night, the aunts fried over 50 large scones. The kids ate the scones with honey, veggies, fruit, and pumpkin juice (vanilla ice cream with orange soda- like a root beer float but with orange Crush.) That was the food for the night!

After the banquet, the guests split for classes. Our adult helpers served as the teachers of the classes.

 

Classes

Hagrid’s Hut: Care of Magical Creatures

Blindfold one child. Assign all other children an animal. If they can read, give them a piece of paper with the name of the animal written on it. (One will be an owl.) The children all make the noise of their animal. The blindfolded child has to wander around until he finds the owl.

Owl Paper Bag Puppet

McGonagall’s Classroom: Transfiguration

Print lots of pictures of characters from the Harry Potter movies. Pin these pictures on each person’s back. The kids ask each other questions about themselves (the photo on their back) to see who they have transfigured into. Examples of questions: Am I a student? Am I a teacher? Am I Harry’s friend? Do I support Voldemort?

Flitwick’s Classroom: Charms

You will need a CD player and either Harry Potter music or Halloween music. The kids dance to the music. When the teacher yells “Immobulus!” the kids have to freeze (hold still) or they are out. Some of our kids got bored after a while with this one so we followed up with a bit of wand practice. Our Flitwick knew some good Harry Potter “magic words”, so he had the kids practice waving their wands, casting spells on each other. The kids really loved pretending they had been “stupified”, etc.

Hogwarts Professors

Snape’s Dungeon- Potions

We asked a cousin to play the part of Snape. He went online and figured out a bunch of fun science experiments. We labeled bottles with weird names from the books. He poured and mixed and impressed the kids with his “magic”.  You could definitely hire a mad scientist for this part, but the kids were really impressed with the experiments he found online… simple but fantastic!

Trelawney’s Classroom- Divination

Recruit an especially animated teacher for this class. The teacher will act as a fortune teller. Our Professor Trelawney had enormous glasses. You’ll want to limit this classroom to small groups of less than six at a time. We made red and blue cards with messages on one side.  The professor spread them out on the table, face down. The kids would ask yes/no questions and the teacher would wave her hands over the cards. If they asked a “Will I…?” question, she would choose a blue card. If they asked a “Should I…?” question, she would pick a red card. It works just like a Magic 8 Ball.  If she had extra time, she would read their palms and tell them about their life and love lines. Here’s a printable of our cards.    Professor Trelawny’s Cards

Large Group Games

After these classes, we brought all of the Houses together for two large group games. The first is perfect for a younger group. The second is better for older kids as it’s more complicated.

Defense Against the Dark Arts- You can choose your favorite Dark Arts professor to host.

I purchased a bunch of long green balloons (the kind you can twist into flower and poodle shapes). These were our snakes (very dark magical snakes!) We inflated them with a balloon pump and tied them to the kids’ ankles. (The aunts who had made scones were our balloon inflaters.) The game was to try to stomp other people’s balloons before yours were popped. The kids loved it.

Quidditch Game

We played an excellent game of Muggle Quidditch based on the instructions from this video.  There are many alternative ways to play Quidditch that you can find online.

Cake

The party ended with our birthday boy opening gifts, blowing out candles, and serving cake. Our cake was simply a really long, curvy line of green frosted cupcakes. The lead cupcake had two ping pong ball eyes and a long licorice tongue sticking out the front. Harry Potter is a parcel tongue, so he just loves a cake that looks like a big snake (and so does Voldemort and Nagini.)