Halloween Costume Guide
Violet Baudelaire invents functional devices from whatever is nearby, including rubber bands, electrical plugs, and the contents of other people’s suitcases, to keep her siblings alive while Count Olaf pursues their inheritance. The blue hair ribbon is the most recognizable single detail of the costume. Without it, the teal cardigan and pink dress read as a pleasant outfit rather than a specific character. The Netflix series, in which Violet is played by Malina Weissman, ran from 2017 to 2019 (Wikipedia), and the fanbase is active enough that the right crowd will recognize the ribbon immediately.
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The teal cardigan and the blue ribbon are what people read first. If the cardigan looks too grey or the bow reads as a hair accessory rather than a purposeful ribbon, the look loses its specificity. The striped socks do significant work at distance, so pulling them fully up over the knee matters more than it might seem at home. A ribbon that has been carefully styled looks like fashion. A ribbon that looks like it was tied back in the middle of solving a problem is accurate.
In The Bad Beginning, Violet signs a marriage certificate with her non-dominant hand. She announces afterward that the marriage is not legal, because the signature does not count. Count Olaf had been planning for several weeks. She thought of it during the ceremony. She was wearing the ribbon the entire time.
Wear the ribbon as if it belongs there, not as a costume prop
The blue bow should look functional rather than decorative. Violet ties her ribbon back from her face when she is thinking, not for appearance. At a party, if someone asks about the bow, the correct in-character explanation is that you were working on something. A ribbon that sits precisely at the center of your head reads as an accessory. A ribbon that holds back a section of hair slightly off-center reads as the real thing.
Keep the striped socks up or they read as an accident
Thigh high socks migrate downward over the course of a night, and striped socks that have slipped to mid-calf look like a wardrobe malfunction rather than a costume choice. Tuck the tops under the hem of the dress when you arrive at the venue. This keeps them from sliding without pulling on them constantly, and it means you only have to check once rather than every hour.
Couples Idea
Might work, but Quigley has no guide here and needs to be built from scratch, and their relationship is also one that Lemony Snicket describes very briefly and then deliberately leaves private. Anyone deep in the ASOUE fandom will place the pairing immediately. At a general party you will be explaining who Quigley is for most of the night, which, in fairness, is also how Lemony Snicket treats him.
Duo Idea
Strong sibling pairing at the center of the series, though Klaus has no guide here and needs to be built from scratch. His look is simpler than Violet’s and does not require a wig, which makes it a manageable scratch project. The visual pairing of Violet’s colorful inventor look and Klaus’s bookish, more subdued aesthetic reads as a coherent sibling unit for fans of the show. For anyone who has not seen it, they still read as siblings who are clearly having a difficult time.
Group Idea: A Series of Unfortunate Events Cast
Might work, but every character except Violet needs a scratch build, and Count Olaf and Lemony Snicket both require significant research into their specific visual design choices. Sunny is an infant in the books and a toddler in the Netflix series, which creates a casting difficulty unless someone is willing to commit to the gag. The group reads correctly to anyone who has seen the show. Everyone else will see four people and a narrator.
Group Idea: Iconic Brave and Resourceful Young Heroines
Excellent group with a clear thematic identity and all four comparison characters have guides here. Katniss carries the broadest recognition across age groups. Coraline and Enola Holmes have strong dedicated fanbases. Lyra is recognizable to readers and fans of the HBO adaptation. Violet is the most subtly dressed of the five, so her ribbon does extra work in this group. At any event with a YA fiction or animation crowd, at least three of the five will be placed immediately.
This is one of the more thrift-friendly builds on the site. Most of the clothing is standard wardrobe territory. The two items worth buying specifically are the teal cardigan and the striped socks, since both the color and pattern need to be correct to read as Violet.
Violet is the eldest. She took a promise to look after her siblings seriously when she was very small, and she has been keeping it in increasingly difficult circumstances ever since. She is also fourteen, which she occasionally remembers at the exact wrong moment.
Start with the pink dress as the base, then layer the teal cardigan over it. Add the pink skinny belt at the waist, pull on the striped thigh high socks, and lace up the pink trainers. Clip the blue hair bow at the crown of your head or use it to tie back the long wavy wig. The cardigan and the blue ribbon together are what make the costume specific to Violet.
The Netflix series ran from 2017 to 2019 and still has an active fanbase, particularly among people who grew up with the books. Violet’s look is subtle enough that it needs the full build to register, and the blue ribbon is the detail that does the most work. At a general party expect some recognition, not universal placement.
Three stand out. “We didn’t lose our family. Only our parents.” She says this to Count Olaf in The Grim Grotto, and the distinction matters to her quite a lot. “If we wait until we’re ready we’ll be waiting for the rest of our lives,” from The Ersatz Elevator. And the more practical one: “A spittoon? You mean like…? We’ll wash it twice.” She says it to Sunny and then does exactly that.
Violet is played by Malina Weissman in the Netflix adaptation, which ran from 2017 to 2019 (IMDb). Emily Browning played Violet in the 2004 film adaptation. The books were written by Daniel Handler under the pen name Lemony Snicket.
She ties it back to keep her hair out of her eyes when she is thinking through an invention. Anyone who knew Violet well could tell she was working on something just by looking at her hair. The ribbon is both a practical habit and the most recognizable detail of her character design across every adaptation of the series.
Hard to pick one. In The Bad Beginning she makes a grappling hook from metal rods, wire, and torn curtains to rescue Sunny from a tower. In The Reptile Room she picks a lock using two prongs from an electrical plug and a bar of soap. She has been building useful things from whatever is nearby since she was two years old. Her favorite inventor is Nikola Tesla.
Quigley is the surviving triplet of the Quagmire family, whose parents also died in a fire. He and Violet meet in The Slippery Slope while climbing the Mortmain Mountains, and Lemony Snicket notably leaves one particular moment between them private. He is a cartographer and a significant presence in the final third of the series.
What does Violet do with her hair when she is thinking through an invention?
Who is Violet Baudelaire’s favorite inventor?
How does Violet make the marriage to Count Olaf legally invalid in The Bad Beginning?