Last updated: June 14, 2026·🔄 Product links checked and unavailable products replaced with current alternatives for 2026.· By Serdar

Halloween Costume Guide

Olga From The Northman Halloween Costume Guide

Five looks. One Slavic sorceress. She will break your mind before you know she is doing it.

Anya Taylor-Joy Sorceress
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Quick Answer: The Olga costume covers five looks from the film, each with a different base and outer layer.
  • Platinum Blonde Wig + Green Maxi Dress (essential for Horse Look)
  • Medieval Costume + White Bonnet (essential for Gray Dress Look)
  • Linen Apron over Green Linen Dress (Water Look)
  • Floral Headpiece + Boho Tunic (Sorceress Look)
  • Faux Fur Shawl + Bronze Shield Brooches (Fur Look)

Olga of the Birch Forest uses mushrooms to drop the household into a psychedelic stupor so that Amleth can carry out his revenge. She calls herself a sorceress but her weapons are plants, timing, and the knowledge that Amleth’s brute-force approach alone will not get either of them out alive. Anya Taylor-Joy plays her in the 2022 Robert Eggers film The Northman, their second collaboration after The Witch (IMDb). The film is a strong visual reference for all five looks: earthy, worn, functional clothes that read as Viking-era Slavic rather than fantasy costume. Recognition at a general party will be low.

Looks5 Looks
DifficultyEasy-Medium
VibeSlavic Sorceress
Cost$30–$100

Olga The Northman Horse Look Costume Items

Olga from The Northman Horse Look Halloween costume infographic showing green maxi dress, platinum blonde wig, cable knit cardigan, brown knee-high boots, poncho, belt, and round leather cord

Horse Look Costume Items

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Olga Horse Look The Northman Slavic
  • 1 Brown Knee-High BootCheck your closet first. Any worn-looking brown boot with a low heel reads correctly. Avoid anything with a pointed toe or visible buckles.
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  • 2 Platinum Blonde Wig (essential)This is the most visually specific detail in the Horse Look. Olga’s pale blonde hair is the first thing that reads as a character choice rather than just a costume. Keep it unstyled and slightly windswept. A flat, too-perfect wig pulls the look toward fashion rather than survival. If your hair is already a pale blonde and long enough, skip it.
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  • 3 Round Leather CordUsed as a belt or binding at the waist over the dress. Keeps the silhouette from looking shapeless without adding any modern structure to it.
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  • 4 Green Maxi Dress (essential)The base of the Horse Look. It needs to be a muted, earthy green, not a bright or saturated tone. Linen or cotton fabric is right. Avoid jersey stretch fabric or anything with a visible pattern. The dress should look like it has been worn before.
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  • 5 Cropped Brown Corduroy PantWorn underneath the maxi dress with the hem visible at the ankle. This layering detail is what makes the Horse Look specific. Without it, you are just a woman in a green dress.
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  • 6 KnitWoven Chenille BlanketUsed as a draped outer wrap over the shoulders, not styled. Let it sit unevenly. Olga is not concerned about symmetry.
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  • 7 Cable Knit CardiganGoes over the dress as a middle layer before the blanket wrap. The more worn and oversized it looks, the better it reads for this character.
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Olga The Northman Gray Dress Look Costume Items

Olga from The Northman Gray Dress Look Halloween costume infographic showing medieval grey dress, white bonnet, linen wrap, and matte red lipstick

Gray Dress Look Costume Items

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Olga Gray Dress Look The Northman Medieval
  • 1 Medieval Costume (essential)The Gray Dress Look is the most straightforward build in this guide. The base is a plain medieval dress in a grey or dark neutral tone. This is the look that reads most immediately as historical costume. Look for something without embroidery or decorative trim.
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  • 2 White BonnetThe bonnet is the item that shifts this from generic medieval to specifically Olga’s Gray Dress Look. Plain white, no lace or decoration.
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  • 3 Linen Bath TowelUsed as a shoulder wrap or sash over the dress. A plain white or natural linen piece draped across one shoulder is the correct effect. Do not tie it.
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  • 4 Matte Red LipstickThe one detail in this look that is not earthy or muted. It is a contrast that reads on camera and holds up in a dark party venue. Apply it clean and leave it matte.
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Olga The Northman Water Look Costume Items

Olga from The Northman Water Look Halloween costume infographic showing green linen maxi dress, long wavy blonde wig, linen apron, and fabric strips

Water Look Costume Items

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Olga Water Look The Northman Viking
  • 1 Long Wavy WigOlga’s hair is loose and unstyled in the water scene. A long wavy pale blonde wig worn without product is correct. Do not curl or straighten it.
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  • 2 Linen Apron (essential)The apron is what defines this look. Tied over the green dress at the waist, it marks Olga as someone who works rather than someone who is dressed for an occasion. This is the Water Look’s most specific item.
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  • 3 Green Linen Maxi DressDarker and more muted than the Horse Look dress. The Water Look reads in deeper tones, closer to forest green than sage.
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  • 4 Fabric StripsWorn as binding around the forearms or wrists. Cut a neutral linen or cotton fabric into long strips and wrap them loosely. This is a practical detail in the scene, not a decorative one.
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Olga The Northman Sorceress Look Costume Items

Olga from The Northman Sorceress Look Halloween costume infographic showing boho tunic, floral headpiece, linen scarf, fleece cloak shawl, and slip-on loafers

Sorceress Look Costume Items

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Olga Sorceress Look The Northman Sorceress
  • 1 Linen ScarfDraped loosely over the head and shoulders. Keep it unfussy. The Sorceress Look is the most layered of the five, so each individual piece needs to stay simple.
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  • 2 Floral Headpiece (essential)This is the one item that tips the Sorceress Look away from generic peasant and toward something more deliberate. Small dried or woven flowers worn close to the head, not a large wreath. If it looks like a wedding flower crown, scale it back.
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  • 3 Lane Q Slip-On LoaferA plain, flat slip-on in a natural or dark tone. The shoe barely registers in this look, which is the point. Nothing should pull attention away from the headpiece and cloak.
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  • 4 Boho Long TunicThe base layer under the cloak. A loose, long tunic in a neutral or earthy tone. Avoid anything with print or pattern.
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  • 5 Jacket Fleece Cloak ShawlThe outer layer that gives the Sorceress Look its weight. Drape it unevenly over one shoulder and let it fall naturally. Do not fasten it symmetrically.
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Olga The Northman Fur Look Costume Items

Olga from The Northman Fur Look Halloween costume infographic showing linen tunic dress, faux fur shawl, bronze Viking shield brooches, leather cap, knitted sweater, and brown vintage belt

Fur Look Costume Items

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Olga Fur Look The Northman Viking
  • 1 Bronze Viking Shield Brooches (essential)These are the most historically specific item in any of the five looks. The brooches pin the fur shawl at the shoulders and mark this immediately as Norse rather than generic medieval. Worn as a pair, one on each shoulder. This is what separates the Fur Look from a woman in a fur wrap.
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  • 2 Faux Fur Shawl (essential)Goes over the knitted sweater and tunic, pinned at both shoulders with the brooches. The heavier the weight of the fur shawl, the more it reads as practical outerwear rather than a costume prop. This is the most visually striking item in the Fur Look.
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  • 3 Linen Tunic DressThe base layer. Plain and long. Nothing should be interesting about it because everything interesting is happening in the layers on top of it.
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  • 4 Leather CapSits flat on the head. Not a hat, not a hood. A simple leather skullcap that says practical and does not say costume.
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  • 5 Knitted SweaterA mid layer between the tunic dress and the fur shawl. A heavy, dark-toned knit that fills out the silhouette before the shawl goes on top.
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  • 6 Brown Vintage Thin BeltWorn at the waist over the tunic dress, under the shawl. Adds shape to what would otherwise be a formless stack of layers.
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Anya Taylor-Joy as Olga in The Northman, wearing coarse historical clothing and a head covering, with a serious expression, in a muted earthy Viking village scene

How to Style the Olga Halloween Costume

Whatever look you choose, the main risk is clean. Olga’s clothes are not clean. They are not distressed in a fashion sense either, just lived-in. If you iron the dress before wearing it, that is the first thing that will break the read. The layering also needs to look accidental rather than considered. The Fur Look is the hardest to get this wrong, because the brooches do the character-specific work and the rest can be rough. The Gray Dress Look is the easiest to make too tidy, because it has fewer layers to create friction.

There is a moment where Olga tells Amleth that his strength breaks men’s bones and she has the cunning to break their minds. She says it as an alliance proposal. She is not asking. She has already decided and is informing him. That quality, certainty without any visible effort, is the one thing all five of her looks share. She never looks like she is trying to do anything.

Layer in the right order

For the Horse Look and Fur Look especially, the belt or leather cord needs to go on before the outer wrap or shawl, not after. If the shawl goes on before anything cinches the waist, the whole silhouette becomes one shapeless pile. At a dark party venue, lost silhouette means lost costume. The mid layer, the cardigan or knitted sweater, goes between the dress and the belt.

The wig needs time to settle

Both the platinum wig for the Horse Look and the long wavy wig for the Water Look tend to sit high on the head until they warm up and conform to your scalp. Put them on at least 30 minutes before you leave, not at the door. A wig that is sitting too high looks like a wig. One that has settled looks like hair. Secure the wig cap first and make sure it covers your hairline.

Anya Taylor-Joy as Olga wading through water in a dark belted tunic in The Northman, with Alexander Skarsgard as Amleth behind her in an overcast moody scene

Olga’s Water Look: What to Know

The Water Look is the one scene where Olga’s clothing is at its most stripped back. Dark tunic, apron, loose hair, fabric binding at the wrists. No layers, no outer wrap. This is the most wearable of the five looks at a warm indoor venue because it is also the lightest. The trade-off is that it is the least visually distinctive. Without the wig and apron reading clearly, it becomes a woman in a green linen dress.

The fabric strips at the wrists are the one practical prop you can do something with at the party. They give you something to fidget with, wrap and unwrap, hand to someone who asks about them. Olga’s whole character is about having something useful in her hands at all times. A prop that actually does something is more useful at a loud party than one that just looks right.

Olga Group Halloween Costume Ideas

Group Idea: The Northman Cast

Legends of the Northman

Strong group for anyone who watched the film and wants to build something together. The visual range across Olga, Amleth, Queen Gudrun, and Fjölnir covers most of the major tones in the film, from slave dress to royalty to warrior. At a general party, the recognition ceiling is low. At a film or horror crowd event, it holds.

Olga Amleth Queen Gudrun Fjolnir the Brotherless

Group Idea: Nordic Warriors

Fierce Nordic Shieldmaidens

Excellent group concept if everyone commits to the build. The four characters share a visual vocabulary of furs, linens, and practical clothing, so the group reads cohesively even to people who do not know all the sources. Eivor and Lagertha are the most widely recognized; Olga and Brida carry the group for people who know those shows. This works at most Halloween events.

Group Idea: Same Actor

The Anya Taylor-Joy Live-Action Roster

Strong group concept if the casting link is the premise. Beth Harmon and Olga are the most visually distinct from each other, which makes the contrast work. Thomasin from The Witch is the hardest to build without dedicated research. The group functions best when each person knows their character well enough to stay in it, because explaining the concept takes more words than most group ideas.

Olga Beth Harmon Thomasin Sandie

Group Idea: Seers and Witches

Cinematic Seers and Witches

Might work, but the thematic link is loose and requires a very specific crowd to land. Melisandre and Winifred Sanderson are widely recognized on their own. Olga and Sabrina require context. The visual contrast across the four is genuinely interesting, ranging from red priestess robes to 17th-century Salem. At a horror-themed party this is one of the stronger theme-group options in this guide.

Group Idea: Same Name

The Olga Monikers

Might work, but only if the joke is the point and everyone is in on it. Olga Pataki from Hey Arnold!, Olga Gurlukovich from Metal Gear Solid 2, and Olga Ivanova from Suspiria 2018 share nothing except a name. Three of the four characters are niche enough that the shared-name gag requires explanation, which is a lot to ask of a Halloween party crowd. This works as an inside joke for a small group who know all four sources.

Olga (The Northman) Olga Pataki Olga Gurlukovich Olga Ivanova

Olga Halloween Costume DIY Tips

Building the Look on a Budget

Most of Olga’s five looks use items that thrift stores stock regularly: linen dresses, knitted sweaters, plain cardigans, leather belts. The one item you are unlikely to find secondhand is the bronze Viking shield brooches for the Fur Look. Everything else is worth checking a thrift store before ordering online.

  • Fabric strips for the Water Look: cut a piece of plain linen or cotton into long strips yourself. No need to buy anything specifically for this.
  • The KnitWoven Chenille Blanket in the Horse Look can be substituted with any heavy knit throw you already own. The color range is wide.
  • Matte red lipstick: if you already own a red lipstick, blot it once with a tissue to reduce shine. Close enough.
  • Leather cord for the Horse Look waist: a thin shoelace in brown works. No one will check.
  • The white bonnet for the Gray Dress Look is the one item with no good substitute. A white cloth tied over the head reads differently and the bonnet shape matters here.
  • Skip the slip-on loafer for the Sorceress Look if you already own flat shoes in any neutral color.

Playing Olga at the Party

Olga never performs. She observes, decides, and acts. The character’s whole function in the film is that she is the only person in the room who knows what she is going to do next. That is a useful quality at a party.

  • Her line: “Your strength breaks men’s bones. I have the cunning to break their minds.” The second half is the one people will remember if you say it quietly rather than as a quote.
  • “Show the shepherd you aren’t a sheep” is the better line for explaining why you are wearing a costume that most people will not immediately recognize. It doubles as an answer.
  • She is the person who already knows how the evening is going to go. Play that. Not smugly. Just settled.
  • If someone asks what you are: “A Slavic sorceress. Enslaved by Vikings. Working on it.” That covers the character in one sentence and invites the follow-up question if they want it.

Olga Halloween Costume: FAQ

Olga has five distinct looks in the film. The Horse Look uses a green maxi dress, cropped brown pants, cable knit cardigan, a platinum blonde wig, and brown knee-high boots. The Gray Dress Look is a medieval costume with a white bonnet and matte red lipstick. The Water Look pairs a green linen maxi dress with a linen apron and fabric strips. The Sorceress Look uses a boho tunic with a floral headpiece and fleece cloak. The Fur Look layers a linen tunic dress with a faux fur shawl, bronze shield brooches, and a leather cap.

The Northman had strong critical reception but limited mainstream reach when it released in 2022, and recognition has faded considerably since. At a general Halloween party, most people will read any of Olga’s looks as a generic Viking or medieval peasant, not as a specific character. It works well at a film festival crowd or among Robert Eggers fans, but you will spend most of the evening explaining who she is.

Her most quoted line is: “Your strength breaks men’s bones. I have the cunning to break their minds.” She also says: “Show the shepherd you aren’t a sheep,” and “I am Olga of the Birch Forest. And I, too, vow to escape this island.” The first is the one that gets remembered because it defines her role in the story plainly.

Olga is played by Anya Taylor-Joy. The film was directed by Robert Eggers, and it marked their second collaboration after The Witch in 2015. Taylor-Joy is also known for The Queen’s Gambit, Last Night in Soho, and Split.

Olga of the Birch Forest is a Slavic woman captured and enslaved by Vikings. She meets Amleth on a slave ship and becomes his ally and eventual lover. She is described as a cunning person and sorceress who uses knowledge of herbs and psychedelic plants as her main weapon, rather than physical force (Robert Eggers Wiki).

The Gray Dress Look is the simplest build: a medieval costume, a white bonnet, a linen wrap, and matte red lipstick. Four items, all easy to source, and no wig required. The Horse Look takes more layering but is more visually complete. The Sorceress Look is the most distinctive but also the most likely to be read as a generic fantasy character rather than Olga specifically.