Halloween Costume Guide
Sky blue face paint, patchwork dress, dark red wig, striped socks, black boots, and stitch marks drawn across your face so every photo looks like it was planned.
Sally is the rag doll protagonist of The Nightmare Before Christmas, Tim Burton’s 1993 stop-motion film that has kept its fanbase intact for three decades. She is made from mismatched fabric patches, has pale blue skin, and spends most of the film being quietly right about everything while no one listens. The patchwork dress and blue makeup are distinct enough that most people will place her immediately.
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Start with the makeup before anything else. Apply the sky blue face and body paint to your face, neck, hands, and any visible skin. Let it dry fully. Once dry, use thin black eyeliner to draw stitch marks across your face: short parallel lines on the forehead, cheeks, and chin. These are what make the makeup read as Sally rather than just a blue face. Apply the red lipstick last.
Then put on the tights, striped socks over them, the dress, and the wig. Fit the wig so the dark red hair falls over both shoulders. Step into the boots.
For character: Sally is quiet and patient in a way that reads as slightly melancholy. At a party, standing slightly apart and watching what’s happening is actually accurate. Speak slowly and softly. If someone asks for your frog’s breath, tell them it will overpower any odor.
Do a Full Makeup Test the Night Before
The blue face paint is the one thing that can go wrong and ruin the costume. Some products apply unevenly, look too dark, or dry chalky. Do a full application at home the night before, check how it looks under indoor lighting, and make sure you know how to remove it. Showing up to test your blue makeup for the first time on Halloween is not the move.
The Stitch Lines Are the Whole Point
The black stitch marks drawn across the face are what communicate “rag doll” to someone who might not immediately place the character. Without them, the blue makeup reads as general face paint. With them, the character clicks even for people who haven’t seen the film recently. Use a fine eyeliner brush for control and keep the marks short and parallel, four or five lines per section is enough. The YouTube makeup guide linked above shows exactly how to place them.
Nightmare Before Christmas Core (Best Fit)
The strongest concept on this list, and the one most likely to get a visible reaction at any Halloween event. The character designs are all distinct and the group reads immediately even to people who haven’t seen the film in years. The only challenge is getting five people to commit, but if your group is already into the film this is the obvious choice.
Tim Burton Universe
A large group concept united by Tim Burton’s visual style rather than one film. It works surprisingly well because all of Burton’s characters share a similar gothic-quirky aesthetic, so the group reads as a theme even to people who don’t know every individual character. Better for bigger groups where you can’t get everyone into one franchise.
Cute Gothic Girls
A themed group rather than a franchise group. The connection is the gothic-cute aesthetic they all share, not a shared universe, and that loose framing actually makes it easier to pull together because everyone picks a character they genuinely want to wear. Wednesday and Draculaura are widely recognized, which helps carry the group at events where not everyone knows the less familiar characters.
The dedicated purchases here are the Sally dress, the face makeup, and the wig. Everything else has a reasonable chance of already being in your wardrobe. Black ankle boots are common enough that you should check your existing shoes before buying new ones. Striped socks you may already have, or can find for a few dollars. Tights you almost certainly own in some form.
The face stitches are easier than they look but require a steady hand and the right tool. A thin eyeliner pen gives more control than a pencil. Draw short parallel lines in sets of four or five, slightly angled, on the forehead, across the nose bridge, on the cheeks, and on the chin. Watch the YouTube makeup guide in the items section before starting. Practice one section on your arm first if you’re unsure about the scale.
Eight pieces: patchwork Sally dress, red ragdoll wig, sky blue face and body makeup, liquid red lipstick, Sally tights, striped dress socks, black ankle boots, and drawn stitch marks in eyeliner across your face. The blue makeup and the patchwork dress are the two things that make the costume work. Start with the makeup before getting dressed, and give it time to dry fully before drawing the stitch lines.
Sally’s two most well-known lines are:
The first is her most emotionally resonant moment in the film. The second is more useful at parties.
Yes, without much debate. The Nightmare Before Christmas has maintained a genuinely dedicated fanbase for over 30 years, and Sally is one of the most recognized characters in the whole film. The patchwork dress and blue makeup are visually distinctive enough that most people at any Halloween event will place her immediately, and the costume reads well from across a room.
Yes. Sally’s pale blue rag doll skin is the defining visual of the character. Without it, the costume looks like a gothic patchwork dress, which could be almost anything. The blue face paint is what locks in the character. Don’t skip it.
Long and dark red, sometimes described as auburn or maroon depending on the scene. A dedicated Sally wig is the easiest way to match it. If your natural hair is already a dark red, you can style it into loose waves and skip the wig.
Sally is a rag doll created by Dr. Finkelstein in Halloween Town. She is made from mismatched fabric panels and can detach and reattach her own limbs. She is quietly in love with Jack Skellington and is one of the only characters who senses his Christmas plan is going to go wrong. Gentle, resourceful, and consistently underestimated.
Yes. A purpose-built girls’ Sally costume is available and handles the sizing better than adapting an adult version. For younger children, use a lighter application of the face paint or skip the full blue base and just do the stitch marks. Swap the boots for something more comfortable if they’ll be walking a long route.
Sally and Jack Skellington is one of the most recognized couples costumes available. The visual contrast between the colorful patchwork dress and the black pinstripe suit is strong enough that the pairing reads immediately. Both costumes work well on their own too, so if one person drops out at the last minute you’re not left with half a concept.