Event types · 03

When the merch is the campaign.

At an activation, printing isn't a party favor — it's the content. The station has to produce pieces people photograph, post, and wear out of the venue. We build for that on purpose.

A

Design menus, drop energy.

Limited menus outperform long ones. Three or four strong designs, presented like a capsule drop — lettered, displayed on a wall, retired when they sell through — create urgency that a binder of options never will. We produce the display wall and rotate the menu with your campaign team mid-event if one design runs away with demand.

B

Co-branding without the awkward.

Sponsor marks live cleanly as patch menus, sleeve hits, or engraved backs — guests choose the co-branded option because it looks good, not because it's mandatory. Patch bars are the activation favorite here: every sponsor gets a spot on the menu, and the guest still feels like they designed their own piece.

C

Built for the camera.

The reveal — a screen lifting, a press opening, steam and heat and a finished piece — is the moment people film. We position stations with lighting and sightlines so the crowd can see the pull, and we keep the handoff separate so filming guests don't stall the line.

Operator lifting a print screen off a finished shirt under dramatic red lighting
The reveal is the content: light it, frame it, let the crowd film it.

Working a campaign brief? Tell us the concept and we'll spec the stations around it.