Easter on Fifth Avenue will be pawsitively pastel.
Amongst the revelers decked out in creative and colorful hats at this year’s Easter Parade and Bonnet Festival, twin chihuahuas Bogie and Kimba will be dressing as dandies, in pastel suits and $125 top hats complete with faux fur bunny ears.
“Kimba’s the white one, so he’s going to have white bunny ears, and Bogie’s the black one, so black ones. Each hat takes approximately one day [to make] from start to finish,” said the dogs’ owner, pet couturier, and fashion designer Anthony Rubio.
“I chose the dandy theme because it is so proper and polished. I always associate Easter Sunday attire with the depictions of old Hollywood musicals which brought me so much joy.”
The annual Midtown holiday tradition, which dates back to the 1870s, runs along Fifth Avenue from East 49th to East 57th Street, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Easter Sunday.
Rubio, a Bronx native, has walked in the parade with his fur babies, who are now 12, since they were six months old — and was one of the first to bring pups.
“When we first went, there were none. People were like, ‘You dressed the dogs? What are you doing?’ And now, everybody loves this,” Rubio told The Post.
Over the years, he’s befriended tourists in the crowd there “who are dazzled and bewildered” by his pets’ lavish costumes.
“They expect the people to be dressed, but when they see the dogs, they gather all the kids and want to take pictures with them,” he explained.
He’s even seen celebrities at the parade, who sometimes go unnoticed amidst all the fanfare, like Bernadette Peters, the late actor Leslie Jordan, and “Saturday Night Live” cast members.
“There’s so much going on that people don’t even realize when there’s a celebrity right under their nose,” he said.
On the human side, Milliner Anne DePasquale took three days to create her parade hat — made of straw, tissue paper roses, silk flowers, fake clementines, and foam and feather butterflies and birds — which she said would retail for $3,000 to $5,000.
“The flowers on the front of the hat are handmade by me,” she said. “I dye crepe paper, hand cut each layer then piece it together to create the flower.”
On the human side, Milliner Anne DePasquale took three days to create her parade hat — made of straw, tissue paper roses, silk flowers, fake clementines, and foam and feather butterflies and birds — which she said would retail for $3,000 to $5,000.
DePasquale, 53, who creates hats for film, TV, and Broadway, will be marching with her husband.
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“We love to go. It’s one of my favorite events in New York,” she said. “There’s tons of creative people.”
She will meet up with friends like Patricia Parenti, who has been attending since the ’80s and will be donning a headpiece from designer Dora Marra of Headdress NY.