These pretty egg-tribly pets are taking care of Easter on Fifth Avenue.
In the typical New York style, the Juerguistas show their creativity with exaggerated Easter attire and equally wearing their dogs and cats.
“I love to dress my children as bunnies, so they will have bunny ears,” said Couturier Pet Anthony Rubio to the post.
Rubio has been attending the Easter and Bonnet parade festival with his Twin Chihuahuas Bogie and Kimba Since 2012, so your puppies are used to putting your best Sunday for the walk in Midtown.
“They really sit on my lap and put their little arms in their clothes as young children would see them,” he said.
Rubio, a Bronx native, thoroughly designs the sets of dogs based on his position.
“A dog likes to horcajadas on my arm as if it were riding a horse, so everything in its design is always on their shoulders and backs,” he explained.
“The other dog sits in my arms upwards, forward, so his things are in the front.”
Couturated canine fans stop them along the route, the fifth Avenue on 49 to 57, to ask for photos.
“There is nothing that brings more joy to my heart than to see the reactions,” he said.
Elizabeth Bays is also bringing her 8 -month -old kitten, which will wear a pink tuxedo to match Bay’s boyfriend.
This is the first time that Dewey will appear in the parade, which extends from 10 am to 4 pm on Easter Sunday, although he probably won a hood.
“I’m tested. The chews,” Bays said.
The native of South Carolina, who now lives in Hell’s Kitchen, was always fascinated by the event due to the 1948 “Easter” film with Fred Astaire and Judy Garland.
“I have to say that it was up to my romantization … just seeing creativity, that’s what I really love … Some people simply do everything possible,” he said.
He used to bring his late Cat Screamy, to whom he will pay tribute to attaching his photo to his hood.
In 2022, the first time he took the feline to the festivities, “it was as if it were a celebrity,” he recalled.
“People said:” Oh my God, you brought a cat. “
Upper East Side’s native, Emily Driscoll, has been “going to the parade since I have memory,” he said.
Now, the mother of the two children has transmitted the tradition of promised vacation to their children, and the issues of their outfits are taken very seriously.
“This year, we are going to do a pollinator theme … that celebrates where all these flowers come from,” he said.
At first, she was all if a girl would be interested in participating.
“When she was pregnant with her, she made an appearance as an egg,” he said.
“I showed her hat and she only gets emotion, so I think it was a good sign.”