Halloween Costume Guide
Steve works at the DX gas station with his best friend Sodapop and has little patience for Ponyboy tagging along. The sleeveless denim jacket over the tank top is the core greaser silhouette that carries this costume, everything else is texture. The Outsiders is a staple of middle school reading lists and the 1983 film has a lasting cult following, but Steve is a supporting greaser rather than one of the three Curtis brothers people usually remember first.
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The denim jacket worn sleeveless and open is what people notice first, and if it’s zipped up or swapped for a full-sleeve version, the look flattens into generic 80s casual instead of greaser specifically. Hair matters more than the item list suggests, the novel describes Steve’s hair as combed into complicated swirls, so slicking it back with some product goes a long way.
Steve mocks Ponyboy in a mean, singsong voice, calling him a “victim of environment,” which says more about Steve’s short temper than any description could. He’s loyal to Sodapop and short with basically everyone else.
Don’t overdo the tattoo placement
One small eagle tattoo on the upper arm is enough. Covering the whole arm in temporary ink reads as a different, more modern aesthetic than the 1960s greaser look this costume is going for.
Slick the hair back if yours is long enough
A bit of pomade or gel goes further than any purchased item on this list toward selling the era. If your hair is too short to style this way, skip it, don’t force a wig for one detail.
Duo Idea
Strong duo from the same greaser gang. Two-Bit’s wisecracking energy plays well against Steve’s short temper, and both costumes share the same denim-and-tattoo visual language so they read as a set even to someone who hasn’t read the book recently.
Group Idea: The Greaser Gang
Strong group covering the range the catalogue actually has build guides for. Sherri Valance adds a Soc-side contrast to the two greasers, giving the group some visual variety instead of three people in denim.
Group Idea: Tom Cruise Roles
Might work, but you’re spanning four decades of Tom Cruise’s career, and Steve Randle is one of his least recognized early roles next to Maverick or Jack Reacher. This lands better as a trivia conversation than a costume group someone clocks on sight.
Group Idea: 1980s Coming-of-Age Cliques
Might work, but this pulls from three separate 80s-adjacent coming-of-age stories, Grease, The Outsiders, and Stand By Me, so the throughline needs explaining. Each look is strong on its own, the shared theme is the weak part.
This is one of the cheapest builds on the site. Nearly everything can come from a closet or a thrift store.
Steve is loyal to one person and short with everyone else. That’s an easy, low-effort personality to run at a party without overplaying it.
Wear a dark gray tank top under a sleeveless denim jacket with plain denim jeans, add a temporary eagle tattoo on one arm, and finish with black sneakers. The sleeveless denim jacket over a tank is the core greaser silhouette that carries this look.
The Outsiders remains a staple of middle school reading lists and the 1983 film has a lasting cult following partly because of its young cast, but Steve is a supporting greaser, not one of the three Curtis brothers most people remember first.
His sharpest moment is mocking Ponyboy with a singsong jab: “Greaser… greaser… greaser… O victim of environment, underprivileged, rotten, no-count hood!” It’s a cruel line, but it captures how quick-tempered and dismissive he can be toward anyone outside his tight friendship with Sodapop.
Steve Randle is played by Tom Cruise in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1983 film adaptation, one of Cruise’s earliest roles. The Outsiders was written by S.E. Hinton and first published as a novel in 1967.
The temporary one is enough, and it’s the whole point of the item. Nobody expects a permanent tattoo for a Halloween costume.
Who wrote the novel The Outsiders?
Who is Steve Randle’s best friend?