Daily Mail

Carve out a HIGH fashion twist this Halloween with a PUMPKIN VASE!

- By India Sturgis

PUMPKIN season is upon us. ghoulish orange faces grimace at us from every windowsill and scream on every doorstep. but while these designs are fine — and fun — for children, let’s be honest, they can somewhat ruin a stylishly-curated interior.

never fear, however — this year’s Halloween gourds have had a grownup makeover. Forget creepy faces, the latest decor must-have is a posh pumpkin given a high fashion twist.

it started on the runway at Loewe when artist and Turner prize nominee Anthea Hamilton placed giant leather pumpkins either side of Jonathan Anderson’s autumn/winter 2022 catwalk and models clutched garish, gathered, pumpkin-hued bags.

The show notes went so far as to describe pumpkins as ‘ objects ripe with surrealist potential and humour, but also replete with beauty’.

Others, including Chloe, Alexander McQueen and Max Mara, picked up on the theme, showing rich spiced oranges and bulbous silhouette­s across their winter collection­s. The chicly conspicuou­s shade of spiced pumpkin — not quite brown, not quite orange — has become a firm favourite with fashion editors and glossy magazines, appearing on the rails of Cos, Zara and Cefinn, among others.

ACCORDING to consumer trend forecastin­g company WGSN, orange was one of the most popular colours on the autumn/winter 2022 catwalks.

‘The rise of spiced-pumpkin shades is part of a general global shift towards warmer, baked tones,’ says interior design and colour consultant Alina Schartner. ‘ From a colour psychology perspectiv­e, deep oranges naturally bring warmth to the home, which is why there is a spike in interest every autumn in countries with cooler climates.’

Cult fashion brand Story MFg has cardigans and tops emblazoned with images of the fruit (pumpkins are technicall­y fruits as they are the edible parts of the plant that contain seeds), while

the influencer and booming tablescape brand Mrs Alice is selling out of velveteen pumpkin trios ( costing £ 68) to scatter around place settings.

This year’s ideas for front-door Halloween decor are certainly haute couture. designers, tastemaker­s and influencer­s have been covering pumpkins in gold leaf, patchworki­ng them in expensive fabrics and creating DIY marbled pumpkins using nail polish dripped into water. Large pumpkins can even be painted and turned into pieces of art.

Happily, 2022’s chicest — and simplest — way to out pumpkin your neighbours is far less work than any of that — simply fill it with vertiginou­s floral displays.

‘A pumpkin vase is a great idea for Halloween,’ says FLOWERBX founder Whitney bromberg Hawkings, who worked for almost two decades with the fashion designer Tom Ford. ‘because, to state the obvious, pumpkins are naturally shaped like a fishbowl vase, come in many sizes and live

happily inside or out for a week or more. They are easy to make too — you don’t need to be a florist.’

The perfect centrepiec­e to impress dinner party guests, a pumpkin full of sunflowers puts a pretty, elegant spin on the Halloween tradition. Marks & Spencer even do a ready- toarrange pumpkin bouquet for

your own scooped- out fruit including antirrhinu­m, chrysanthe­mum, eucalyptus and rose (£35, marksandsp­encer.com).

instagram culture is further fuelling our passion for all things pumpkin. ‘driven partially by the outdoor lockdown boom, squashes, gourds and pumpkins of all descriptio­ns are having a moment,’ says trend forecaster and style consultant Hannah

Craggs, who believes consumers are seeking greater connection with nature.

For a really fashionabl­e look, seek out harder- to - get varieties of squash and gourd — such as crown princes ( blue- grey), acorn squash ( smaller, dark green and orange- yellow), Japanese kabocha squash (dark green and flattish) or casperita (tiny and white) — and arrange them artfully in a pumpkin still life.

but this doesn’t have to be an expensive trend. A pumpkin can be picked up from your local supermarke­t for as little as £2. it’s sustainabl­e too — when you have had enough of your pumpkin vase, you can eat it or compost it. nothing needs wasting or sending to landfill, so Halloween needn’t be ghastly after all.

 ?? ?? Gourd idea: Whitney.
Gourd idea: Whitney.
 ?? Pictures: SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Right: Halloween fashion
Pictures: SHUTTERSTO­CK Right: Halloween fashion

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