360 Photo Booths for Weddings & Private Events
Every couple wants their reception to feel different from the last ten they attended. A 360 photo booth does that almost on its own: a slow-motion video of the two of you mid-spin, confetti in the air, your wedding party piling in — it’s the kind of clip guests actually post and rewatch. But the difference between a booth that sits idle and one that draws a line all night comes down to placement, timing, and a little planning.
Where the booth should live at your reception
The booth needs roughly a 10×10 ft footprint and an 8 ft ceiling clearance for the arm to spin safely. The instinct is to tuck it out of the way — resist that. The booths that get used are the ones guests walk past: near the bar, beside the dance floor, or along the path between dinner and the lounge. Visibility is the whole game.
The best moments to run it
You don’t need the booth going from the first guest’s arrival. The footage is best when the room is loose and lit:
- Cocktail hour — guests are mingling, drinks in hand, and the line builds naturally.
- After the first dances — the formal moments are done and everyone’s ready to let go.
- Peak dance floor — this is when the confetti, props, and group spins produce the clips people share.
Make it feel like your wedding
A custom overlay with your names and date, a backdrop that matches your colors, and props that fit your vibe (elegant florals vs. neon glow sticks) turn a generic rental into part of your design. Same-night digital delivery means guests can text their clips before they leave — which is also how half the room finds out the booth exists.
Beyond weddings
Everything above applies to milestone birthdays, anniversaries, quinceañeras, graduations, and engagement parties. The format scales from an intimate 30-person dinner to a 300-guest celebration — the only thing that changes is how many spins you’ll fit in.