Download this Día de Muertos free template (for Powerpoint and Google Slides) and make your presentation unique. This one is designed with the look and feel of the mexican Day of the dead (Día de Muertos). The background uses a gorgeous illustration of a shrine decorated with the traditional cempasúchil (marigold), candles, alfeñiques and papel picado. Use it for remembering friends and family members who have died, send family photos in their costumes or propose your ideas for decorating the neighborhood. Honor your loved ones and celebrate this joyful and colorful party with this template!
This free Día de Muertos presentation template features:
- Fully editable. Easy to change colors, text and photos
- 25 different slides with tips to improve your presentation. Choose the layouts that best fit your content. Add, delete or re-order slide pages based on your needs
- Colorful design with a Day of the dead background illustrated by Alex Monge
- Feature-rich theme with examples of styles for graphs, charts and tables
- It includes a customizable icon family with 80 different icons and a world map (you can change sizes and colors). And more free icons & maps for your presentations available.
- Use as a Google Slides theme or download as PowerPoint template and edit on your computer. Also export to PDF, JPG, etc.
- 16:9 screen layout (Can change to 4:3 with a click, but some graphic assets may not work well)
Brent Dreyer says
Hi, just a quick note. I downloaded your Halloween Day of the Dead 2018 presentation template but when I tried to open it in PPT, it gave me an error:
PowerPoint found a problem with the content in “http://…. Halloween 2018 · Día de muertos · SlidesCarnival.pptx. PowerPoint can attempt to repair the presentation.
If you trust the source of this presentation, click Repair. (otherwise cancel)
Any suggestions?
Jimena says
Hi Brent, I’ve just tried it and found no problem. Maybe it didn’t download completely, the file should weight 4mb. Which Powerpoint version are you using?
yash palayam says
Templates for Powerpoint & Google Slides is great. No doubt it works well
Edward says
Hi,
It’s not opening the .ppt file . Please refer me a solution or any other opening editor .
waiting for your answer.
Jimena says
Hi Edward, I’m sorry to hear that
Which Powerpoint version are you using? Remember that you can always use the Google Slides version just with your browser
Maria de La Rosa says
As a Mexican I am deeply offended. The Day of The Dead is a happy day. Not a scary day. Imagine you had the opportunity to see your dead loved ones again well the Day of The Dead is a celebration that allows that to happen.
Please next time you make a presentation make sure you research about the holiday/etc. so people like me don’t get offended.
Jimena says
Hola María,
Mis más sinceras disculpas si te has sentido ofendida por el diseño de la plantilla. Créeme que hice la investigación y sé que es un día de celebración, al igual que aquí en España el Día de Difuntos. Aunque los textos hablan de terror (principalmente porque están dirigidos al público anglosajón y ellos lo identifican con Halloween), creo que ni el diseño ni la ilustración son terroríficos y transmiten la alegría de la celebración con el altar, las flores y las ofrendas.
Bonete says
I used it to present the students to the Day of the Dead tradition from Mexico.
Thank you for this design, it’s wonderful
Angela says
Hi I just wanted to make a comment on the title of the template. Personally I have a problem with the words “spooky”. This is a holiday in Mexico it isn’t meant to be portrayed as spooky. It is a colorful and happy day to celebrate. This day is also has nothing to do with Halloween. It is celebrated on a separate day with different meanings. Another thing is that the outfits wore on Day of the Dead aren’t Halloween or scary costumes they are actually cultural outfits that we wear. I also had a problem on how you disobeyed the meaning of the Catrina because she isn’t meant to give fright. This template is deeply offensive please be careful of your choices and words that you use. Even if you don’t think it’s offensive it can still be to others. It would be great if you can change up your wording or take it down as a whole so others don’t also get offended. Just a reminder this isn’t meant to be spooky!! It is completely different from Halloween. If you want correct information on it I suggest that you ask someone who actually celebrates this holiday instead of getting t all from the internet. I speak English there is no need to reply back in Spanish :)
Jimena Catalina Gayo says
Hello Angela, I replied in spanish before because I am from (and live in) Spain, so it’s much easier for me when I know that the person I’m answering to is going to understand me.
I understand your comments, in Spain we also celebrate “Día de Todos los Santos” and it is not related to Halloween either. I know well the Día de Muertos tradition and its differences with Halloween, the misunderstanding arose because I designed this template for an Anglo-Saxon public. However I’ve updated the texts to be more respectful.
Vanessa says
“bloodcurling”, “fear”, “spooky” – seriously? Two other people have told you that this template is problematic and offensive and your response is “I designed this template for anglo-saxon” public. You should be ashamed. If you were honestly trying to be respectful, you would have never included those words. Saying that it is for anglo-saxon consumers makes it even worse. Imagine an educator using your template and your word choice to present something about el Dia de Muertos to their students. Do you see the issue here?
Jimena Catalina Gayo says
I’m sorry Vanessa but I don’t understand your comment. It’s been a year since I modified this template, when I received the comments you are talking about, and I changed all the vocabulary you mention to festive and celebration terms so it’s respectful with the Mexican tradition.
So please tell me where you have seen those terms: “bloodcurling”, “fear”, “spooky”.