Event types · 01
Trade show printing that respects the aisle.
On a show floor, the giveaway line is your booth's front door. We plan trade show stations around one number: how many finished pieces per hour keeps the crowd flowing instead of clotting.
Booth math before booth design.
One press producing 60–90 pieces an hour serves steady traffic; a keynote break dumping 200 people at your booth does not care about your average. For exhibit halls we quote parallel stations — two or four presses with a shared dryer and a separate pickup table — so surges queue at the menu, not at the machine. A 10×10 fits a single station tight; a 10×20 runs two comfortably with a display wall.
Load-in is half the job.
Convention centers mean docks, drayage windows, and electrical orders placed weeks out. We handle our own equipment paperwork, order the 20A drop with your booth vendor, and arrive inside the marshaling window — you shouldn't learn what a targeted move-in time is from your printer. For multi-day shows, blanks restock nightly based on the day's counts.
What exhibitors usually book.
DTF shirts and totes carry the volume; a hat bar makes the booth photogenic; UV DTF stickers give badge-scanned visitors a fast second touch. Totes earn their keep at shows — guests carry your logo down every aisle for the rest of the day.

Bring your booth number and floor plan — we'll scope the station around it.