
Photo: Courtesy of Drawing Booth

Able to work from photos, Breach can design faces, logos, or even pets in foam. As for the most unusual designs he's created, Breach said that he rendered a "very odd assortment of objects" in foam for a skit with Amy Schumer and Comedy Central. Each design typically takes around five minutes.
Margarita Corporan Photography

At the T-shirt counter, attendees fill out a form indicating which years they have attended the Worldwide Partner Conference, and then staff print those "tour dates" on the back of a shirt, similar to a concert tour shirt.
Photo: Andrew Herrold

Organizers are offering the custom U.S. partner tour T-shirts as a way to celebrate longtime attendees.
Photo: Andrew Herrold

Microsoft is using R.F.I.D. wristbands to transmit information that in the past was delivered as printed materials. The wristbands will also be used to enhance some of the attendee experiences, such as a party Tuesday night at Walt Disney World.
Photo: Andrew Herrold

Around the lounge, attendees can tap their R.F.I.D. wristbands to activate things such as event R.S.V.P.s and receipt of photos.
Photo: Andrew Herrold

Artists from the Danish company Arts in Meetings sketched portraits of conference attendees.
Photo: Michael Aloy

Girls were able to code their own bracelets which were 3d printed and shipped to them post-event (Google Made With Code)

Marie Aiello Design Studio’s elegant Great Gatsby picnic spread included fresh flower arrangements, a tiered display of cookies, 1920s-style accessories, and a façade of the yellow 1929 Duesenberg Leonardo DiCaprio drives in Baz Luhrmann’s movie.
Photo: Becky Yee Photography

Grab-and-go options also included Mason jars filled with Italian pasta salad.
Photo: Natalie Jenks/Orange Photography

Interior and lifestyle design company Steilish created an immersive Wizard of Oz-inspired tableau featuring a field of fabric poppies, votives covered in ruby-red glitter, gingham napkins, and a picnic basket disguised as a hot air balloon.
Photo: Becky Yee Photography

SLS Interior Design went with an urban theme that included a graffitied picnic blanket, skateboard-style mobile dining trays, and kitschy Solo cup wine glasses.
Photo: Becky Yee Photography