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Mexico’s Olympic ski team in Pyeongchang may be small, but it is mighty. That will happen when Death is your companion on the slopes.

The country’s two Alpine skiers in the Winter Games are wearing fabulous outfits that carry a “Day of the Dead” theme, an homage to the country’s famous Dia de los Muertos, a holiday on which families and friends pray for and remember those who have died.

The outfits, which feature colorful, bejeweled and beflowered skulls on a black background, follow in the proud tradition of Hubertus von Hohenlohe, 59, who designed them and represented Mexico in six Winter Games. In Sochi in 2014, von Hohenlohe memorably wore a mariachi outfit, and in Vancouver in 2010, he went with a desperado look.

Von Hohenlohe also happens to be a prince as well as a skier, photographer, businessman, and a pop singer known as Andy Himalaya and Royal Disaster. His family reigned over a principality in what is now the northeastern of Baden-Württemberg in Germany until the early 19th century and he spends most of his time in Europe. He was eligible to compete for Mexico because he was born while his father, Prince Alfonso, was running a Volkswagen plant there; he failed in his attempt to become the oldest winter Olympian this year.