Hartford Courant

Virus gear all the rage as it rages

Dressing up as a roll of toilet paper or sanitizer? Yep. It’s still Halloween

- By Sapna Maheshwari and Gillian Friedman

Scott Morris, co-owner of Morris Costumes in Charlotte, North Carolina, has slept at the office for the past 50 days — but he isn’t complainin­g.

His company, which distribute­s Halloween costumes and decor and operates the Halloween Express chain, has been racing to meet demand for a holiday that, earlier this year, seemed as if it might not happen as it usually does. Retailers that typically place orders between May and July largely held off, nervous about whether people would dress up and go out during a pandemic.

“Then they all woke up in early August and said, ‘Oh my gosh, Halloween is going to happen,’ ” Morris said.

So began a mad dash for a business that is surprising­ly robust this year — with certain twists. Coronaviru­s-related costumes like hand sanitizer, disinfecta­nt wipes and illustrati­ons of the virus itself have boomed, Morris said. People are also dressing up as rolls of toilet paper in a nod to the obsessive stockpilin­g of the item during the early months of the pandemic. The e-commerce surge has Morris Costumes mailing out as many as 30,000 packages a day.

There are fewer costumes tied to recent movies, however, given the fact that Hollywood is mostly on pause.

And despite the internet’s enthusiasm for a “sexy hand sanitizer” costume, Morris said the “sexy costume category” had perhaps struggled the most in this unusual year.

“Most of that is worn by college people going to bars, and I think that a lot of the bars are going to be shut down,” he said.

The outlook for Halloween was as grim as a reaper at the outset of the pandemic, with companies like Hershey cutting back on candy packaging tied to trick-ortreating and some pop-up retailers for spooky wares waiting to secure physical spaces.

But in the past two months, many Americans have leaned into fictional fright in an all-too terrifying year. They are going all out on decoration­s like inflatable witches and hanging skeletons as part of a broader spending blitz on home goods, and they are snapping up costumes as they look to celebrate Halloween safely, with many viewing it as a last outdoor hurrah before winter descends.

“Halloween is turning out to be the last potential holiday that people can celebrate, either outside under a patio with some heating lamps or being able to trick or treat, before Thanksgivi­ng hits,” said Robert Berman, chief executive of Rasta Imposta, a costume seller.

“The whole family is getting into the spirit because everyone keeps saying we need Halloween; we need something for the kids,” Berman added.

The National Retail Federation, an industry group, expected Halloween consumer spending to hit about $8 billion this year, a decline from $8.8 billion last year, as a result of fewer Halloween parties, trick-or-treating and haunted house visits. But enthusiasm around costumes and decoration­s has persisted.

“We have sold more decoration­s, more animated props than we ever have in the history of our company,” which dates back to 1965, said Morris, who owns the business with his sister Terri Bate. People are “dressing up the house much more,” he said.

Even people abstaining from trick-ortreating Saturday are donning new getups, often for Facebook and Instagram, said Berman, whose sales have also increased. While some customers have shied away from costumes that depict images of the coronaviru­s, people have embraced outfits that, he said, reflect “the culture of what we’re faced with now.”

 ?? ALYCEE BYRD/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? COVID-themed Halloween items are for sale Tuesday at Morris Costumes in Charlotte, North Carolina. Halloween is Saturday.
ALYCEE BYRD/THE NEW YORK TIMES COVID-themed Halloween items are for sale Tuesday at Morris Costumes in Charlotte, North Carolina. Halloween is Saturday.

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