Shoes

In 2011, New Balance took over New York's 620 Loft & Garden for a launch that saw producer MKG use shoes instead of vases as a tongue-and-cheek way to hold floral arrangements.
Photo: Jika González/BizBash
Ice

For the Canadian unveiling of the new limited edition Rémy Louis XIII Black Pearl cognac in Toronto in 2007, small golden bags filled with parting gifts flanked a square ice vase holding red roses.
Photo: Robyn Small/BizBash
Urinals

One of the twists of Smirnoff's 2001 Twistotica product launch event in New York was that the men's and women's restrooms were switched. So the planning team at EventQuest put flowers in the urinals of the new women's bathroom.
Photo: Courtesy of Smirnoff
Tea Kettles

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts Los Angeles hosted its annual Bafta Los Angeles TV Tea at the SLS Hotel during Emmy weekend this year, honoring nominees from America and Europe. At the event, tea kettles in the shape of red phone booths held floral arrangements.
Photo: Frazer Harrison/BAFTA LA/Getty Images for BAFTA LA
Boots

Every year, the New York Botanical Garden's Orchid Dinner brings together top talents from the floral, interior, and fashion design communities who devise individual tables. In 2007, designers Tony Ingrao and Randy Kemper put together an equestrian-theme table for Stark Carpet. Riding boots doubled as vases, and a single silver stirrup adorned the back of each chair cover.
Photo: Marina Senra for BizBash
Bird Cages

Variety and Women in Film's pre-Emmy party in Los Angeles in 2012 was inspired by A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and whimsical decor included hanging bird cages filled with flowers.
Photo: Joe Scarnici/WireImage
Popcorn Boxes

The Starlight Children's Foundation hosted its Starlight Gala, sponsored by Toys “R” Us, at Toronto's Fairmont Royal York Hotel earlier this year. With the goal of raising money for sick or injured children, organizers created a whimsical bash filled with circus-inspired ideas. To that end, fluffy white flowers spilled out of striped containers that were shaped like classic popcorn boxes.
Photo: George Pimentel Photography
Cardboard

For a 2009 West Elm opening in New York, event designer David Stark helped underscore the retailer’s dedication to environmental awareness by creating auction items made from packing materials. More than half the objects crafted by Stark were functional, including vases made from laser-cut cardboard. (Glass test tubes inside allow users to fill the flower holders with water.)
Photo: Jessica Torossian/BizBash
Industrial Materials

Industrial elements dominated the Tate Americas Foundation's Artists Dinner in New York in May. Designer David Stark used giant metallic tubes, florescent lights, and galvanized metal accents in raw event space Skylight at Moynihan Station. Soft pink flowers contrasted the industrial materials that held them.
Photo: Nadia Chaudhury/BizBash
Tires

To raise funds for its Nascare (Neighbors and Supporters Care) program, the Boca Raton Community Hospital ditched the typical ballroom setting in favor of a private hangar at the Boca Airport in 2006. Boston-based Rafanelli Events designed the event, which had a Nascar theme, inspired by the name of the hospital's cancer program. Tires served as unconventional vessels to hold flowers.
Photo: BizBash

The “Facing Center” iPad centerpieces from Keep Interacting allow organizers to incorporate photos and other information into an event’s table decor. Launched earlier this year, the iPads display a slideshow of photos, product images, sponsor information, or other content provided by the event’s host ahead of time. Then, at the event, the company provides a photographer to take photos that are instantly added to the display. Using the touch screens, guests can also share the images on social media, send them via email, and order printed copies to pick up from a kiosk on site.
Photo: Courtesy of Keep Interacting

At a 50th anniversary party for Dior Nails, 2013 BizBash Innovator Garin Baura created a performance-art-style centerpiece inspired by artist Holten Rower’s layered, colorful poured paintings: As various courses came out, staffers also served platters of brightly hued flowers which were scattered onto the all-white table. “People were taking flowers and throwing them around—it loosened things up and made the dinner experience more playful,” Baura said.
Photo: Courtesy of Baura New York

The 13th annual Friends of the High Line benefit, held at New York’s Pier 57 in May, centered on photographs of the High Line taken through the years. In lieu of the event’s usual foliage-heavy centerpieces, printed photographs were scattered atop raised Lucite platforms, which were eventually also used to hold the night's family-style dinner platters.
Photo: Nadia Chaudhury/BizBash

In Miami, the dinner tables at a Star Trek-theme vintner dinner—one of 17 celebrity chef-helmed events at private homes held as part of the 13th annual Naples Winter Wine Festival in January—offered centerpieces with iPads embedded on the sides that displayed the evening’s menu, updating as each course was served.
Photo: MIla Bridger

At the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum's Butterfly Ball in Chicago in May, the gala had a farm-like atmosphere. Tables were decked with miniature gardens potted with tomatoes, colorful peppers, asparagus, and kale; around the centerpieces, fairy lights in miniature Mason jars added to the elegant yard-party vibe.
Photo: Steve Becker/beckermedia.com

At the 125th anniversary gala for the National Geographic Society in June, the “Land, Sea, and Sky” theme inspired an array of custom tables and toppers, including glacier ice sculptures. Select Lucite tables were not topped with any decorations, but instead held water and plant life, or natural objects like seashells.
Photo: Robert Isacson

Fifteen fashion and interior designers each designed their own table at the Partnership With Children’s Gala in April. Interior design firm Paul and Martha L.L.C. created an attention-grabbing tabletop by using a $90,000 sculpture of pink roses as a centerpiece. Created by artist Will Ryman, the oversize flowers were made of materials including plaster, paint, and aluminum mesh.
Photo: Andrew Fitzsimons/PatrickMcMullan.com

Centerpieces were appropriately made of glowing, vintage photo slides at the Art Institute of Chicago’s Snap Gala in October, which benefitted the Photography Gala Fund.
Photo: Julia Stotz

Centerpieces at the Whitney Museum of American Art gala, held in October, encouraged playful interaction, featuring silver paint cans holding breadsticks and also Sharpie markers that guests could use to draw on the canvas tablecloths.
Photo: Nadia Chaudhury/BizBash

Russell Simmons’s Art for Life benefit, held in the Hamptons in July, featured an idyllic theme—“Field of Dreams”—that came to life in the whimsical centerpieces. Floating kites suspended over each table and anchored to wheatgrass flats had colorful signs on their tails that held the names of artistic vocations such as “dancer” and “poet.”
Photo: Johnny Nunez

Held in April, the Catalina Island Conservancy Ball’s campfire theme was reflected in the decor, which included centerpieces of illuminated apothecary jars filled with the makings of a classic campsite snack: s’mores.
Photo: Shana Cassidy Photography

Instead of centerpieces, David Stark Design created lazy Susans rimmed in white LED lights that made sharing the antipasto easier at New York’s Robin Hood Foundation benefit in May.
Photo: Nadia Chaudhury/BizBash

The Starlight Children's Foundation hosted its Starlight Gala, sponsored by Toys "R" Us, at Toronto's Fairmont Royal York Hotel in April. The event’s circus-inspired ideas included dinner tables topped with miniature Ferris wheels that held cupcakes with colorful frosting.
Photo: George Pimentel Photography

In March, guests at the California Science Center’s Discovery Ball dined under the wings of NASA’s retired Endeavour space shuttle. In keeping with the space exploration theme, illuminated tables were topped with celestial decor elements like mini solar systems in glass bowls.
Photo: Nadine Froger Photography