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Idea bin

August 6, 2012
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Photo: Jamie Watts
While all the rooms were meticulously planned, none was as popular as the space that housed old-school carnival claw games. Rather than plush toys and candy, the machines held small items, like lipsticks and jewelry, in Chanel gift bags.
While all the rooms were meticulously planned, none was as popular as the space that housed old-school carnival claw games. Rather than plush toys and candy, the machines held small items, like lipsticks and jewelry, in Chanel gift bags.
Photo: Billy Farrell/BFAnyc.com
Surrounded by camellia trees, the promenade area was redone as a garden space, reminiscent of Jean Cocteau's classic La Belle et la Bête. The room highlighted Chanel's fine jewelry collection alongside flowers that shone with diamonds.
Surrounded by camellia trees, the promenade area was redone as a garden space, reminiscent of Jean Cocteau's classic La Belle et la Bête. The room highlighted Chanel's fine jewelry collection alongside flowers that shone with diamonds.
Photo: Billy Farrell/BFAnyc.com
Vertical pocket in tonal plaid, $120, from Makr.
Vertical pocket in tonal plaid, $120, from Makr.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Move, $50, from Normann Copenhagen.
Move, $50, from Normann Copenhagen.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Louis Vuitton Taiga, $260, from Eluxury.
Louis Vuitton Taiga, $260, from Eluxury.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Blomus, $14, from Greener Grass Design.
Blomus, $14, from Greener Grass Design.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Zip by Adrian Olabuenaga for Acme Studios, $39, from Unica Home.
Zip by Adrian Olabuenaga for Acme Studios, $39, from Unica Home.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Grain calf leather, $195, from April in Paris.
Grain calf leather, $195, from April in Paris.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Business card holder, $48, from the Conran Shop.
Business card holder, $48, from the Conran Shop.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Gloss, $3.75, from See Jane Work.
Gloss, $3.75, from See Jane Work.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
Give and Take, $18, from Design Within Reach.
Give and Take, $18, from Design Within Reach.
Photo: Nick Ferrari for BizBash
At a March event at Gotham Hall, Elegant Affairs Caterers created “salad-tinis” made by “chef-tenders,” who mixed ingredients with oversize drink shakers and served them in martini glasses.
At a March event at Gotham Hall, Elegant Affairs Caterers created “salad-tinis” made by “chef-tenders,” who mixed ingredients with oversize drink shakers and served them in martini glasses.
Photo: Jan Van Pak
At April’s Michael Jordan Celebrity Golf Invitational at Aria Resort in Las Vegas, MGM Resorts Events served dessert shooters, cupcakes, and mini pastries on a custom-built LED video chandelier.
At April’s Michael Jordan Celebrity Golf Invitational at Aria Resort in Las Vegas, MGM Resorts Events served dessert shooters, cupcakes, and mini pastries on a custom-built LED video chandelier.
Photo: Kelly McKeon
The chandelier lowered to become a 24-foot round dessert buffet.
The chandelier lowered to become a 24-foot round dessert buffet.
Photo: Kelly McKeon
Everlast Productions illuminated the outside of the building with green lighting to match Heineken's logo.
Everlast Productions illuminated the outside of the building with green lighting to match Heineken's logo.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
Relevent created custom-branded tables and furniture for the event.
Relevent created custom-branded tables and furniture for the event.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
Relevent used Heineken crates imported from Amsterdam to create seating options for guests.
Relevent used Heineken crates imported from Amsterdam to create seating options for guests.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
Guests could design their own T-shirt with one of four Heineken images that experts screened onto them.
Guests could design their own T-shirt with one of four Heineken images that experts screened onto them.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
Fender provided free guitar lessons in its branded lounge.
Fender provided free guitar lessons in its branded lounge.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
CuisneWorks served Latin dishes like paella and tacos throughout the weekend.
CuisneWorks served Latin dishes like paella and tacos throughout the weekend.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
The beer company's logo decorated the railings of the building's atrium and central sculpture.
The beer company's logo decorated the railings of the building's atrium and central sculpture.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
DJ Chad Hugo performed on Friday night.
DJ Chad Hugo performed on Friday night.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
The Hold Steady also performed on Friday.
The Hold Steady also performed on Friday.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
On Friday, the Cold War Kids performed on the second floor, which overlooks the main atrium of the Moore Building.
On Friday, the Cold War Kids performed on the second floor, which overlooks the main atrium of the Moore Building.
Photo: Seth Browarnik/WorldRedEye.com
Raw Industry Party
Raw Industry Party
For Toronto architecture firm Raw’s annual industry party on June 21, Kim Graham and Associates worked with Sublime Catering to create a playful menu. Dessert options included bites of cotton candy that, with LED lights, looked as though they were glowing in the dark.
Photo: Kyle Burton
At Warner Brothers Television Group's party to celebrate the opening of the studio’s new exhibit, 'Television: Out of the Box,' the arrivals carpet was striped to look like TV color bars.
At Warner Brothers Television Group's party to celebrate the opening of the studio’s new exhibit, "Television: Out of the Box," the arrivals carpet was striped to look like TV color bars.
Photo: Imeh Akpanudosen/Getty Images
The candy shop was brightly lit and filled with Ernst & Young's colours, yellow and white. There were four candy stations that had fudge, yellow cotton candy, a self-serve candy bar with branded plastic bags, and white-iced cookies and cupcakes.
The candy shop was brightly lit and filled with Ernst & Young's colours, yellow and white. There were four candy stations that had fudge, yellow cotton candy, a self-serve candy bar with branded plastic bags, and white-iced cookies and cupcakes.
Photo: BizBash
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For the presentation—which honored Vera Wang with a Hall of Fame award—the production crew used a long curtain as a backdrop and a divider.
For the presentation—which honored Vera Wang with a Hall of Fame award—the production crew used a long curtain as a backdrop and a divider.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
Each lounge area was color-coded with lighting.
Each lounge area was color-coded with lighting.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
The walls of the Armory highlighted the perfume factory motif, a choice Dalzell Production made so the design wouldn't fight with the overall look of the venue.
The walls of the Armory highlighted the perfume factory motif, a choice Dalzell Production made so the design wouldn't fight with the overall look of the venue.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
Larger lounges, like the one from International Flavors & Fragrances, had more specific decor.
Larger lounges, like the one from International Flavors & Fragrances, had more specific decor.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
Caterer Great Performances placed serving stations of appetizers throughout the lounge.
Caterer Great Performances placed serving stations of appetizers throughout the lounge.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
Rather than a live musical performer, the foundation brought in a DJ for the event.
Rather than a live musical performer, the foundation brought in a DJ for the event.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio for BizBash
1. Off the Wall
1. Off the Wall
In what Target called a “vertical fashion show,” acrobats danced, posed, and catapulted down runways on the side of 620 Fifth Avenue, one of the buildings that flanks the ice rink at Rockefeller Center, in 2005.
Photo: Courtesy of T & L Event Management
2. Follow the Yellow Road
2. Follow the Yellow Road
A yellow zigzag path at a 2008 Kohler event in Chicago was a surprising alternative to the traditional entrance path. 
Photo: Courtesy of Kohler
3. Two-in-One
3. Two-in-One
The cocktail napkins for the 2002 opening of Prada’s store in SoHo in New York were useful in two ways, with an itinerary and maps showing the locations for the night’s multiple parties.
Photo: BizBash
4. Cooking School
4. Cooking School
The Baptist Health Foundation got guests interacting at its 2009 benefit in Orlando by having them prepare their own dinners while following instructions from a chef onstage. 
Photo: Alexis Corchado for BizBash
5. Second Life Centerpieces
5. Second Life Centerpieces
At the 2008 Robin Hood Foundation gala, XO laptops on each dinner table displayed menus, statistics about the organization’s work, and images of flowers, and then were donated to city schoolchildren after the event.
Photo: Joe Fornabaio
6. Easy Access
6. Easy Access
R Cano Events used retro lazy Susans to help guests share family-style food presentations at a 2004 Safe Horizon luncheon in New York.
Photo: BizBash
7. Pushing Paper
7. Pushing Paper
For Domino magazine’s first anniversary in New York in 2006 (which doubled as a fund-raiser for the Woodycrest House project), Aparat dressed up a silent-auction table with long scrolls of paper. In addition to functioning as the bidding list, the scrolls provided a simple yet striking look.
Photo: Billy Farrell/PatrickMcMullan.com
8. Worth the Wait
8. Worth the Wait
To handle large crowds waiting for a single elevator at a 2004 Dom Perignon event, Susan Magrino Agency hired the Harlem Gospel Choir to entertain guests as they waited in line.
Photo: BizBash
8. Worth the Wait
8. Worth the Wait
Bathroom lines can be notoriously long, so at Redmoon’s Spectacle Lunatique benefit in Chicago, a guitarist entertained guests as they waited.
Photo: Barry Brecheisen for BizBash
8. Worth the Wait
8. Worth the Wait
For a Tiger Beer party in 2007, producers Joao and Readymade Projects worked with artist James Clar to dress up an elevator with a 3-D LED installation, which surely made the ride up to the event more interesting.
Photo: Courtesy of Jennifer Warren
9. Heightened Performances
9. Heightened Performances
To celebrate the renovation of Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall in 2007, Roy Braeger designed a vertical stage that tied into the event’s construction-themed decor and gave guests an unobstructed view of the musicians.
Photo: Philip Greenberg
9. Heightened Performances
9. Heightened Performances
The Broad Contemporary Art Museum’s 2008 opening party in Los Angeles, produced by Ben Bourgeois, had a floating stage that descended from the ceiling for an attention-getting dinner show.
Photo: Nadine Froger Photography
10. Tunnel Vision
10. Tunnel Vision
At the 2004 International Contemporary Furniture Fair, Norwegian architecture firm MMW designed a large tube that connected the Javits Center’s main space with its north pavilion, a stylish way to join two large spaces.
Photo: BizBash
11. A Swinging Time
11. A Swinging Time
The Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art’s 2009 ArtEdge benefit had a lighthearted feel, with childhood games and activities including a large swing set.
Photo: Eric Craig for BizBash
12. Top Design
12. Top Design
Here’s how to create drama overhead (or hide a less-than-desirable ceiling): Van Wyck & Van Wyck wove bands of fabric together above the Whitney Museum of American Art’s 2008 Art Party.
Photo: Keith Sirchio
13. Lit From Above
13. Lit From Above
For a private dinner in 2006, JMVisuals created an unexpected overhead lighting trick: rows of frosted votives suspended from the ceiling on square Lucite tiles. 
14. Active Branding
14. Active Branding
In a playful take on the normally static step-and-repeat, artist Andrey Bartenev had costumed performers interact with guests at the Watermill Center’s gala in 2007.
Photo: Joe Schildhorn/PatrickMcMullan.com
15. Looking Up
15. Looking Up
At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Johnson & Johnson displayed photographs on a wall that curved upward.
Photo: Eric Powell for BizBash
16. Free Ride
16. Free Ride
Amfar got a free invitation design for a 2006 benefit by holding a contest among art students.
Photo: BizBash
17. Stage Lift
17. Stage Lift
For a 2006 Motorola event, KSE Productions suspended a metal platform from the ceiling as an unconventional lectern and used stretch-fabric video screens as a backdrop.
Photo: Jeff Thomas/ImageCapture
18. Flower Power
18. Flower Power
At the 2006 Screen Actors Guild awards in Los Angeles, Stanlee Gatti created lavish displays of upside-down calla lilies, dramatic decorations that also hid poles.
Photo: Nadine Froger Photography
20. People Watching
20. People Watching
At the Council of Fashion Designers of America’s awards in 2005, an oversize mirror encrusted with Swarovski crystals displayed a live telecast of the arrivals during the cocktail hour. 
Photo: Billy Farrell/PatrickMcMullan.com
21. Cocktails With a Twist
21. Cocktails With a Twist
LDJ Productions and Brenton Catering served champagne cocktails in test tubes at hair-care brand Joico’s chemistry-lab-inspired 30th anniversary party in New York in 2005.
Photo: BizBash
22. Conveyor Belt Catering
22. Conveyor Belt Catering
Occasions Caterers created a conveyor-belt buffet station for a 2009 screening of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen in Washington. 
Photo: BizBash
23. Stars and Stripes
23. Stars and Stripes
Instead of the typical white tent, Van Wyck & Van Wyck used an eye-catching striped version at House & Garden’s 2006 New Tastemakers issue party. 
Photo: Cutty McGill
24. Food in a Field
24. Food in a Field
Years before the locavore movement became popular, Mark Fahrer Caterers set up a nature-inspired buffet that had guests foraging for food at a 2002 party for outgoing New York City Parks & Recreation Commissioner Henry Stern.
Photo: BizBash
25. Skirting the Issue
25. Skirting the Issue
At the 2006 opening of Parasuco’s flagship store, six dancers surprised guests by emerging from within a 14-foot-tall skirt for a live performance.
Photo: Jimi Celeste/Patrick McMullan.com
25. Skirting the Issue
25. Skirting the Issue
The American Heart Association’s 2006 Rhapsody in Red event had a dramatic event entryway designed by Matthew David Events: a model wore a silk organza dress with a 30-foot-long skirt that draped over the New York Public Library’s entrance.
Photo: Jaime Watts
26. Tailor Made
26. Tailor Made
At arts organization Performa’s 2006 benefit, a team of tailors sewed white clothes on the spot for guests. The performance piece provided entertainment and a take-home gift, and helped create a backdrop for the evening’s cool lighting projections.
Photo: Dan Morgan
27. Runway Projections
27. Runway Projections
The Council of Fashion Designers of America’s 2003 awards featured dramatic projections by Scharff Weisberg on a white, minimalist set, a clean yet impactful look the show updated with digital mapping projections in its 2011 iteration. 
Photo: BizBash
28. Up in the Air
28. Up in the Air
Snapple’s 2006 “High Tea Tour” combined large-scale product placement and entertainment with free hot-air balloon rides in public spaces in nine cities.
Photo: BizBash
29. Pretty Potties
29. Pretty Potties
To spruce up portable bathrooms at Travel & Leisure’s 2004 World’s Best Awards party at Lincoln Center, planner Laura Aviva worked with sponsors Kohler and L’Occitane to bring in a row of stylish sinks and tubes of lotion, respectively.
Photo: BizBash
30. Actors-Turned-Waiters
30. Actors-Turned-Waiters
Breaking away from the step-and-repeat to interact with the crowd, actors including Uma Thurman served as waiters at a 2007 Sundance event. They wore T-shirts listing their first jobs on the front and their breakthrough films on the back.
Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images
31. Show the Way
31. Show the Way
As a quirky way to greet guests, the Sculpture Center’s 2006 winter gala in New York had flag greeters signal the semaphore code for “Welcome to the Sculpture Center.”
Photo: Eileen Costa/Courtesy of Sculpture Center
31. Show the Way
31. Show the Way
Travel & Leisure used oversize balloons as a cheap and effective way to mark a pathway for its 35th birthday celebration, held in Los Angeles in 2006.
Photo: BizBash
32. Box Set
32. Box Set
For Warner Music Group’s 2006 Grammy party in Los Angeles, Graphology made invitations in the form of a wooden box with a foam cutout in the shape of a Grammy, to serve as a packing case for the award. The invite read, “B.Y.O.G.”
Photo: BizBash
33. Skip a Round
33. Skip a Round
Marriott’s “Association Masters” dinner in 2005 used glowing triangular tables from now-defunct Lounge 22.
Photo: Moon Lee Photography for the New York Marriott Marquis
33. Skip a Round
33. Skip a Round
For a GQ sales meeting dinner in 2004, one giant X-shaped table seated all 90 attendees. 
Photo: BizBash
33. Skip a Round
33. Skip a Round
The Dia Art Foundation’s gala in 2006 had glowing circular tables.
Photo: Eric Weiss/Courtesy of Dia Art Foundation.
34. Guiding Light
34. Guiding Light
For the 120th anniversaries of Moët & Chandon’s White Star label and the Statue of Liberty, Publicis Events used 3-D projections to create a four-minute light show on the monument in 2006.
Photo: Nicole Villamora
35. Self-Serve Sips
35. Self-Serve Sips
Guests helped themselves to water-cooler cocktails at the Museum of Contemporary Art’s 2009 ArtEdge benefit.
Photo: Eric Craig for BizBash
36. Background Music
36. Background Music
At design firm Trollbäck & Company’s fifth anniversary party in 2004, everything was white, even the clothes of Latin jazz band Jose Conde y Ola Fresca, to serve as a blank canvas for constantly changing projections.
Photo: BizBash
37. Lit From Outside
37. Lit From Outside
JKLD lit a 2002 Bulgari watch launch at Studio 545 in New York from the outside in, thanks to a giant light board suspended by a 133-foot crane.
Photo: BizBash
38. Cutting Tradition
38. Cutting Tradition
For the opening of the Hearst Tower in 2006, Van Wyck & Van Wyck brought in aerialists to perform 100 feet above the crowd, a dramatic twist on the traditional ribbon cutting. 
Photo: Marina Senra
39. Leg Work
39. Leg Work
At a 2006 Swarovski shoe launch in New York, designer Todd Shearer put shoes on mannequins as well as live models whose sudden movements surprised guests.
Photo: BizBash
40. Ice the Honoree
40. Ice the Honoree
At a 2006 roast of Mario Batali benefiting the Food Bank of New York City, Okamoto Studio encased the chef’s trademark orange clogs in giant blocks of ice. 
Photo: BizBash
41. Help Yourself
41. Help Yourself
At the opening party for the Felissimo Design House in New York in 2001, guests never had to wait for a waiter to come by with food. They could pick hors d’oeuvres right from the wall of an installation by French artist Dorothee Selz.
Photo: BizBash
42. Lip Reading
42. Lip Reading
A fun alternative to the usual palm readings, Allure magazine brought in lip-reader Sasha Nanus to analyze guests’ lipstick prints at the 2006 launch of Patrick McMullan’s book Kiss Kiss.
Photo: BizBash
43. Self-Portraits
43. Self-Portraits
Digital photo booth projections, like this one from Mark van S. at the Whitney Museum of American Art’s 2006 benefit, have become an event staple for mixing interactive entertainment and decor.
Photo: Nicole Villamora for Bizbash
44. Showing Their Roots
44. Showing Their Roots
David Beahm suspended an upside-down bed of tulips, with roots and all, above a table at the Horticultural Society of New York’s 2002 Flowers and Design gala.
Photo: BizBash
45. Moving Billboard
45. Moving Billboard
Microsoft worked with Maloney & Fox, BongarBiz, and Grounded Aerial Dance Theater to create a memorable live performance on a New York billboard to launch Windows Vista in 2007. Aerialists rappelled down the side of a building to create a 3-D representation of the logo.
Photo: Keith Bedford/Microsoft Corporation
46. Voice Recognition
46. Voice Recognition
For the reopening of New York’s Le Cirque in 2006, the Susan Magrino Agency had the restaurant’s owner, Sirio Maccioni, record the R.S.V.P. voice-mail greeting, a surprising and personal touch that can be replicated for film premieres, incentive events, or almost any gathering.
47. Decor for the Floor
47. Decor for the Floor
For the Whitney Museum’s 2006 Art Party in New York, planners considered what guests saw underfoot and covered a black carpet with silver sequins.
Photo: Billy Farrell/PatrickMcMullan.com
47. Decor for the Floor
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
48. Telling T-Shirts
48. Telling T-Shirts
Waiters didn’t have to remember what they were serving (and guests didn’t have to ask) when now-defunct Match Catering printed T-shirts with food descriptions for a 2004 BizBash event.
Photo: BizBash
48. Telling T-Shirts
48. Telling T-Shirts
For the 2004 launch of Inside CNN in New York’s Time Warner Center, Brand Marketers integrated outfitted staffers in T-shirts into a presentation with flat-screen panels broadcasting a live feed of the network. 
Photo: BizBash
49. Curtain Call
49. Curtain Call
XA, the Experiential Agency, used long grosgrain ribbons to simply and effectively divide a large space at a 2006 Tag Heuer event.
Photo: BizBash
50. Flip the Script
50. Flip the Script
French magician Gérard Majax worked with Louis Vuitton to create an inventive product launch in 2002. It involved special mirrored headgear that guests used to view products suspended upside-down from the ceiling in a dark room. The trick created the illusion that the items were floating right-side-up.
Photo: BizBash
19. Looking Forward
19. Looking Forward
At a 2006 dinner held by investment bank Rodman & Renshaw, Event Design Inc. made sure all the attendees had a clear view of the evening’s entertainment by creating seven levels of seating with rows of individual lounges on each level.
Photo: Courtesy of EDI
33. Skip a Round
33. Skip a Round
There was no head table at TD Bank’s 2009 employee awards dinner in New York. All attendees sat at a single, amoeba-shaped table.
Photo: Roger Dong for BizBash
For the launch of its Very Sexy Now fragrance, Victoria's Secret gave editors individual cake by Sylvia Weinstock topped with an edible perfume bottle.
For the launch of its Very Sexy Now fragrance, Victoria's Secret gave editors individual cake by Sylvia Weinstock topped with an edible perfume bottle.
Photo: Jessica Torossian for BizBash
At Target's Liberty of London pop-up shop in New York in March, staffers handed out flowers to shoppers waiting in line.
At Target's Liberty of London pop-up shop in New York in March, staffers handed out flowers to shoppers waiting in line.
Photo: Jessica Torossian for BizBash
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Cincy is redefining what's next in meetings and events.
Downtown Cincinnati's $240 million reimagined Duke Energy Convention Center
Experiential Marketing, Activations & Sponsorships
Block Party: See How Minecraft Was Transformed Into an IRL Video Game
The popular game has been turned into an interactive in-person experience that just opened in Canada.
Visitors embark on a rescue mission with a team of fellow Minecrafters.
United States
7 Event Venues in St. Louis That Will Wow Attendees
From an architectural playground and museum to a luxury hotel, visitors are sure to be pleasantly surprised.
1. City Museum
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