Event types · 02
Corporate rooms want polish, not a print shop.
Holiday parties, sales kickoffs, appreciation days: the station has to look like it belongs next to the band and the bar. That's a staging problem as much as a printing one, and we treat it that way.
Match the service to the dress code.
For cocktail-attire receptions, embroidery and monogramming read as a luxury amenity — quiet, precise, and personal. For all-hands energy, a DTF station or hat bar gives people something to gather around. Engraved tumblers work as the executive-tier line at leadership dinners. Most corporate bookings land on two stations: one high-energy, one quiet.
Ballroom logistics we already know.
Hotel ballrooms mean freight elevators, banquet-power limits, and setup windows squeezed between room flips. We arrive an hour before our own setup call, dress the station to your event design, and coordinate with catering on placement so the print line never crosses the food line. Teardown is silent-auction quiet if the program is still running.
Personalization is the point.
Company-store swag gets left on chairs; a crewneck with your name embroidered at the party goes home. Name queues, initial menus, and department colorways are cheap to add and are consistently the difference between merch that's kept and merch that's counted as waste.

Planning a party or kickoff? Send date, venue, and headcount for a two-station proposal.