Trade shows
Eight minutes of dwell time, on purpose.
A stitched cap takes about eight minutes. That is eight minutes an attendee stands at your booth — watching the machine, talking to your team, being scanned. No candy bowl or claw machine buys that.
Built for the convention floor
The bar fits a standard 10×10 inline booth with room left for your reps; in a 10×20 we add a pickup counter so finished pieces do not bottleneck the aisle. Everything hand-carries in road cases, which means no drayage minimums and no waiting on the marshaling yard — we walk in with the first exhibitor badge holders.
Power is one line item on your decorator order: a single 500-watt drop covers the whole station, the smallest package on most show forms. If the drop lands in the wrong corner, our cable kit reaches 25 feet with ramps that pass floor-manager inspection.
The prep deadline that matters
Digitizing is the long pole. Get us vector art at least ten days before the show; we return a stitched sample photo for approval before anything ships to the convention city. On the floor, a deliberately tight menu — one logo, two placements, six thread colors — keeps each decision under thirty seconds and the machines saturated all day.
For Las Vegas shows, the flat $900 travel fee and an extra day of buffer for load-in windows is the honest plan. We have run the convention corridor enough to know the difference between the published dock schedule and the real one.
Next stop: your venue
Which show is next on your calendar?
Send the show name, booth size, and city. We will confirm the power order, the prep timeline, and a per-day price.