Halston bursts onto the baby-name runway with the flash of a strobe light and the warmth of a summer salsa beat. Born as an English place-surname—most scholars trace it to the Old English combo “halig” (holy) + “stān” (stone), literally a “sacred rock”—the name later high-kicked into pop culture when legendary designer Roy Halston Frowick draped Studio 54 in liquid-silver glamour. Today, this smooth two-syllable charmer (pronounced HAL-stuhn) slips easily onto boys and girls alike, its unisex vibe as effortless as a linen guayabera at a seaside fiesta. U.S. charts show a slow-burn ascent—just a sprinkle of babies in the ’90s, now close to 100 a year—proof that Halston is still rare enough to sparkle yet familiar enough not to raise any abuela’s eyebrow. Think of it as a stylish passport: English roots, Manhattan chic, a hint of Latin zest, and plenty of room for your little corazón to write the next chapter.
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