Private Event by Preston Bailey

"I love creating a unique place for guests to congregate and enjoy one another, so I thought, why not create a massive floral carpet that would serve both as a beautiful focal point and a gathering area? I designed a 'carpet' and filled it with hundreds of beautiful blooms and then covered it with Plexiglas. The result was a statement piece that allowed guests to dance on air." —Preston Bailey
Photo: Courtesy of PrestonBailey.com/John Labbe

In a smart move that avoided the complications that come with laying carpet over stairs—especially on a snowy night in New York—the event's producers projected a strip of red light over the library's front steps, effectively creating a virtual red carpet that led to the entrance. Hundreds of LED candles sat on either side of the illuminated pathway.
Photo: Carolyn Curtis/BizBash

A 22- by 24-foot dance floor was erected over the venue's existing pool. Drained of water, the recessed space held a neon Attimo sign surrounded by dried flowers.
Photo: Billy Farrell/PatrickMcMullan.com
'Capitol File' White House Correspondents' Dinner After-Party

The magazine held its after-party at the Carnegie Library, famous for its lighted dance floor showing a map of the city. The event also featured lounges and other activations from sponsors Clear Channel Communications, the Entertainment Software Association, Mercedes-Benz, Corona Light, Reyka Vodka, and Saks Fifth Avenue.
Photo: Beth Kormanik/BizBash
47. Decor for the Floor

To create a modern, all-white look for a 2006 dinner at Manhattan’s Pier 60, Empire Force Events hid the venue’s colorful, patterned carpet with a layer of large, white confetti.
Photo: Courtesy of Empire Force Events
Twinkle Light Dance Floor

The bash following dinner, dubbed the "happily ever after party" was held in a tent. In one room guests danced on a dance floor from Fox Ventures that was embedded with LED lights. "We used this element because they looked like night stars," said NACE gala co-chair Aisha Malik.
Photo: Evelyn Alas

Silver sequins covered a black carpet at Skylight for the Whitney Museum of American Art's ArtParty—a benefit for the museum's young social set.
Photo: Billy Farrell/Patrick McMullan

At Le Bain, the silver Mylar chandeliers matched the disco balls that filled the pool. A plexiglass pane covered the pool, creating a stage for the night's performer.
Photo: Nilaya Sabnis

Photo: Anneke Hymmen

Louis Vuitton's forest tableau for its launch at Saks Fifth Avenue
Photo: Courtesy of Louis Vuitton North America