Times Colonist

Costumes go to the dogs

Pets with social lives, online profiles dress up for more than just Halloween

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LOS ANGELES — Wally the Welsh corgi used to get dressed up to go trick-ortreating for Halloween, often as a banana, once as a dinosaur.

But Wally, owned by Marc and Cynthia Dalangin of Wharton, New Jersey, doesn’t go trick-or-treating anymore. Like a lot of busy dogs, he has too many other engagement­s. And as a budding Instagram celebrity, he needs a wardrobe full of costumes to choose from.

As dogs have filled their social calendars, they’ve had to fill their closets too. They’re not just dressing up once a year on Halloween. These days, dogs and their owners are getting invited to parties, parades, meet-ups, pumpkin patches, picnics, Christmas tree farms and many other themed outings.

As a result, canine costumes have become more than just something dogs wear once to a party. It’s essential for dogs and cats who are up-and-coming social media celebritie­s to have a varied wardrobe. With their likes and followers growing faster than speeding bullets, their fans want new photos all the time.

Two years ago, Wally left the simple banana costume behind when he underwent a lifestyle and wardrobe makeover. Now he dresses like Elvis Presley (“King Corgi”) and Michael Jackson (“Thriller Corgi”) and has become a rising star on Instagram, with 63,000 followers, and Facebook, with 12,000 likes.

Wally’s transforma­tion coincides with the pet costume industry’s coming of age. And business is booming.

The U.S. Retail Federation estimates that 20 million pet owners will dress their pets this Halloween, spending $350 million US on the costumes.

The online marketplac­e eBay had 1.5 million pet costumes for sale on Oct. 21 out of 800 million items listed for sale, with 159 million active customers in 200 countries, said Zoher Karu, vice-president of global optimizati­on and data for eBay.

Pet costumes represent two per cent of Costume SuperCente­r’s sales. The company sells nothing but costumes and accessorie­s on eBay and other sites.

“There does not seem to be a ceiling on what people are willing to spend on their pets,” said Michael Esposito, the company’s business developmen­t and affiliate marketing director. The majority of their pet costumes sell for $14.99 to $24.99. You would never know the costume only required a 10th of the fabric needed for a human costume, he said.

“Costume SuperCente­r has seen its pet costume sales double every year for the last three years,” Esposito said. He expects the trend to continue.

Halloween costumes for pets and people tend to follow news headlines and movies. The latest Star Wars movie isn’t out yet but demand is already high for Darth Vader and Yoda costumes.

“In March next year, Batman and Superman — two of the most iconic superheroe­s — will face off on the big screen, but we are already seeing the competitio­n play out in stores and online this Halloween season with these two costumes neck-and-neck, topping our bestsellin­g list,” said Eran Cohen, chief customer experience officer for PetSmart.

It’s close, but the Batman costume is actually outselling the rest of the field, Cohen said.

The top five bestsellin­g costumes on eBay for pets are Superman, lion, panda, Batman and necktie. For adults, the top five costumes are Batman, Frozen characters, Alice in Wonderland, Star Wars characters and French maid. Spider-Man came in 10th.

The children’s list put Mario and Luigi (Mario Bros.) on top, then Star Wars, Batman, Frozen and a witch. The Minions, Spider-Man, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Minnie and Mickey Mouse and Power Rangers round out the kids list.

Another popular pet costume consists of a figure that appears to be riding the dog, like a storm-trooper riding a dewback, a reptile from Star Wars.

Cynthia Dalangin has been in charge of Wally’s wardrobe expansion, buying from eBay, PetSmart, DIY sites and garage sales. Wally has a particular­ly large collection of bowties because they set off his ears so well. She gets a lot of ideas from Pinterest and Etsy.

Most sellers said they stock pet costumes year-round because birthdays, Christmas and New Year’s are all good holidays for partying and photograph­s. And keeping up one’s online profile with fresh photos is a year-round job. Wally went as Batman on Oct. 17 when he joined 56 other corgis at a pumpkin patch at Conklin Farms in Montville, New Jersey. A minion is next.

 ??  ?? Welsh corgi Wally, dressed in a Batman costume, doesn’t go out anymore. People come to see him instead or visit him on Instagram, where he has 63,000 followers, and Facebook, with 12,000 followers.
Welsh corgi Wally, dressed in a Batman costume, doesn’t go out anymore. People come to see him instead or visit him on Instagram, where he has 63,000 followers, and Facebook, with 12,000 followers.

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