WHAT'S HAPPENING NOW:
SUBSCRIBE TO MAGAZINE
Exhibiting &
Event Topics
EXHIBITOR
Magazine
Find It
Marketplace
EXHIBITOR
LIVE
EXHIBITOR
Education Week
EXHIBITOR
eTrak
CTSM
Certification
EXHIBITOR
Insight
EXHIBITOR
Awards
News
Network
Advertise
With Us
Topics
Exhibits
& Experiences
Exhibit
Design
Exhibit
Design Awards
Green
Exhibiting
Rental
Exhibits
Exhibit
Graphics
RFPs & Booth
Management
Small
Booths
Fabric, Flooring
& More
Technology
Case
Studies
design awards
gold award
Category: Small Budget Exhibitor: Two Parts LLC Design/Fabrication: Two Parts LLC, New York, 747-777-3246, www.two.parts Show: International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF), 2016 Budget: Less than $40,000 Size: 5-by-10 feet

PHOTOS: Two Parts LLC
Light Boxes
Christo Logan, the proprietor of Two Parts LLC, had a laundry list of challenges leading up to the 2016 International Contemporary Furniture Fair. Logan launched his company, which makes 3-D-printed ceramic light fixtures, mere months before the show and could allot only a meager budget for an exhibit. Moreover, his last-minute decision to market his newly minted company at ICFF meant there were slim pickings for booth spaces, and Two Parts was saddled with a scant 5-by-10-foot plot of real estate in the back of the hall. But none of those challenges deterred him. Instead, they created an impetus for an inexpensive, unusual design.

The Sum of its Parts
Even more impressive than Two Parts LLC's inventive booth design was the miniscule budget it took to build: a mere $680. The exhibit was largely a DIY affair, constructed on site with no professional labor and with little more than 48 cardboard boxes, 17 light fixtures, aluminum supports, and carefully applied watercolor paint.
Attendees first saw a kaleidoscope of colored lights juxtaposed against a dimensional brown background. Upon closer inspection, however, they realized the angular back wall actually comprised four dozen corrugated cardboard boxes that had been stacked at an angle and zip-tied to aluminum supports behind the booth. Seventeen fixtures in myriad colors and styles hung from the apex of the cardboard boxes, and those lights were programmed to continually illuminate and extinguish, creating a subtle wave-like illusion. To add a faint dash of color, Logan painted the cells containing colored lights with a corresponding hue of watercolor paint, resulting in an elegant reflection that didn't eliminate the cardboard texture of the boxy back wall. Meanwhile, a stack of product catalogues was housed within one of the boxes that had been cut to create an unobtrusive, low-tech lit rack.

The unusual design drew attendees down the aisle like fireflies to a hypnotic, multicolored flame and earned the respect of Exhibit Design Awards judges. In the words of one judge, who marveled at the design's miniscule $680 price tag, "This exhibit just goes to show that a great idea trumps all else, including time, space, and money." E


you might also like
 
Join the EXHIBITOR Community Search the Site
TOPICS
Measurement & Budgeting
Planning & Execution
Marketing & Promotion
Events & Venues
Personal & Career
Exhibits & Experiences
International Exhibiting
Resources for Rookies
Research & Resources
MAGAZINE
Subscribe Today!
Renew Subscription
Update Address
Digital Downloads
Newsletters
Advertise
FIND IT
Exhibit & Display Producers
Products & Services
All Companies
Get Listed
EXHIBITORLIVE
Sessions
Certification
Exhibit Hall
Exhibit at the Show
Registration
ETRAK
Sessions
Certification
F.A.Q.
Registration
EDUCATION WEEK
Overview
Sessions
Hotel
Registration
CERTIFICATION
The Program
Steps to Certification
Faculty and Staff
Enroll in CTSM
Submit Quiz Answers
My CTSM
AWARDS
Sizzle Awards
Exhibit Design Awards
Portable/Modular Awards
Corporate Event Awards
Centers of Excellence
NEWS
Associations/Press
Awards
Company News
International
New Products
People
Shows & Events
Venues & Destinations
EXHIBITOR News
© Exhibitor Group | The Leader in Trade Show and Corporate Event Marketing Education PO Box 5996, Rochester, MN 55903-5996 | (507) 289-6556 | Need Help? Ask Scott