
In August, Simple Booth debuted a new product called LiveFeed. In conjunction with the company’s HALO photo booth platform, LiveFeed displays the guests’ photos in a real-time gallery, which can be projected or viewed on screens.
Photo: Courtesy of Simple Booth

Darel Carey's simplistic yet striking black-and-white room offered the type of notice-me design that Instagrammers often search for in the form of street art or vibrantly painted city walls.
Photo: Tiffany Rose Photography

Pop-up museum Happy Place came to Los Angeles in November 2017 and will return at L.A. Live in April. During the exhibit’s initial run, one of the Instagram-friendly rooms had larger-than-life letters spelling “XO” that guests could climb inside of. Wallpaper featuring lipstick prints adorned the space.
Photo: Liam Biskaris

Celebrity event designer Preston Bailey pulled out all the stops for his own wedding—which was held on Valentine’s Day in 2013 inside the Empire State Building. The lavish gathering had a creative, romantic touch: Black-and-white personal snapshots of the couple’s guests gave the hallway an art gallery-style look.
Photo: Carolyn Curtis/BizBash

A room filled with 207,000 yellow balls has fun and inspirational sayings written on the walls, such as “Celine Dijon” and “There are nice people all around you.”
Photo: Courtesy of Color Factory

In a lavender room created by artist Tom Stayte, a printer prints thousands of selfies sourced from the Internet every 12 seconds.
Photo: Courtesy of Color Factory