Halloween Costume Guide
The Schuyler Sisters sneak out of their father’s house to watch the revolution happen in real time, argue about what it means, and make clear they have more politics between them than most of the men in the room. The color-coded gowns are what make this group readable across a room. Hamilton is a musical with book, music, and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda that premiered on Broadway in 2015 (Wikipedia), and the filmed version of the original Broadway production has been on Disney+ since July 2020 (IMDb). Recognition for this costume is effectively universal in 2026.
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Eliza — Blue
Angelica — Orange
Peggy — Gold
The color is the entire costume. Blue, orange, and gold worn as a trio reads as the Schuyler Sisters immediately, even to people who have only seen the show’s cultural footprint rather than the show itself. Any one gown alone is just a colonial-era dress. The earrings and shoes matter less than getting the right gown in the right color, so if time or budget runs tight, start with the three dresses and add the rest as you can.
In the show’s opening group number, Angelica shuts down Burr’s attempt to flirt by explaining she is looking for something more intellectually serious than what he is offering. Eliza is fully present and completely delighted. Peggy is already looking for the exit. Three personalities established in under three minutes is the entire function of the number, and it is also the dynamic to carry at a Halloween party.
Match the color family, not the exact shade
The blue, orange, and gold coding is what the group depends on, but museum accuracy is not required. A warm navy next to a burnt orange next to an amber reads as the sisters. A powder blue next to a coral next to a lemon yellow does not. Before anyone orders, share photos of what each person is buying so the colors can be checked together rather than discovered at the party.
Floor-length gowns at Halloween parties
A floor-length dress at a nighttime outdoor event, on stairs, or in a packed venue has a specific set of problems. Know whether the party is mostly indoor before committing to the full hem length. Bringing a small pack of safety pins to loop or bustle the hem saves a lot of frustration in the second half of the night.
Couples Idea
Strong couple concept for anyone in a pair who wants to represent the central relationship in the musical. Eliza in the blue gown and Alexander in a revolutionary-era coat and breeches is the recognizable pairing from the show. Alexander has no CostumeRealm page, so that costume needs to be built from reference images of the original production. Doing this couple means Angelica and Peggy stay home, which loses the three-color visual impact of the sisters group.
Duo Idea
Strong duo for two people who want to do Hamilton without building the full trio. The blue and orange contrast is visually distinct and both sisters have strong material in the show. Losing Peggy does reduce part of the color-coded impact that makes the sisters concept work at a glance, so be ready for people to ask where the gold one is. All items for both looks are listed in this guide.
Group Idea: Hamilton Cast
Excellent group for a Hamilton-themed Halloween. The Schuyler Sisters’ color-coded gowns anchor the group visually, and adding Hamilton, Burr, and King George gives it a full-cast feel that reads to anyone who has seen the show. Hamilton and Burr need to be built from reference images of the original production. King George has a CostumeRealm guide that makes that build considerably easier.
Group Idea: Historical & Period Drama Women
Might work, but the connection between these three productions is loose enough that the group reads as “period drama women” rather than a coherent theme. The Schuyler Sisters are revolutionary-era American, Lady Violet is Edwardian English, and Natasha Rostova is from a show set in Napoleonic Russia. All three have CostumeRealm guides, so the individual builds are well-supported. The group concept works best at events where people are happy to explain the theme.
This is a straightforward build with no specialty materials, no props to fabricate, and no character-specific makeup. The main challenge is color coordination across three people ordering from different places at different times.
The group dynamic is most of the fun here. Assertive Angelica, enthusiastic Eliza, and reluctant Peggy is a three-person performance that does not require any individual to sustain a character alone.
Assign a sister to each person, then match the color. Eliza wears the blue maiden dress, silver ballroom shoes, and drop earrings. Angelica wears the orange maiden dress, orange ballroom shoes, and hoop earrings. Peggy wears the gold maiden dress, white pump heels, and leverback earrings. The color-coding is what makes the group immediately readable at a party.
Hamilton has been running in touring productions on multiple continents since 2015, and the Disney+ filmed version extended its reach well beyond the original Broadway audience. The Schuyler Sisters specifically are among the most recognizable elements of the show, including for people who have never seen it but have absorbed it culturally. Recognition is very high in 2026.
The sisters’ most memorable moments are sung rather than spoken, which makes standalone quotes difficult. Angelica is most associated with her argument that the founding documents should have included women and her insistence on finding an intellectual match rather than just any match. Eliza’s most cited arc is her determination to preserve Alexander’s legacy and, at the very end of the show, to tell her own story on her own terms.
Three daughters of Philip Schuyler, a Revolutionary War general from New York. The real Eliza Schuyler married Alexander Hamilton in 1780. Angelica is the eldest and most politically minded of the three. Peggy (Margarita) has a smaller role in the show but has become a fan favorite largely because of her very specific reluctant energy in the opening group number.
The costume works because of the three-color combination. A single person in a blue colonial-era gown reads as a period costume, not specifically as Eliza from Hamilton. You need at least two, ideally all three, for the reference to land clearly at a general party.
Depends on your energy. Angelica is the most assertive and gets the most material in the first act. Eliza is the emotional center of the whole show. Peggy is the fan favorite for her specific exasperated presence in the group number. Gold is also genuinely the easiest of the three colors to find in formal wear, which is a practical argument for Peggy.
The Schuyler Sisters are the most accessible group build from the show. Three color-coded gowns make it immediately clear who everyone is, with three straightforward items per person. The Hamilton, Burr, and King George combination is visually striking but requires significantly more involved costume work for each character.
In the original Broadway cast: Phillipa Soo as Eliza, Renée Elise Goldsberry as Angelica, and Jasmine Cephas Jones as Peggy. Goldsberry won the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical for her role as Angelica at the 2016 Tony Awards. The filmed version of the original production starring the same cast is on Disney+.