Make your event more engaging with a selfie booth rental. Capture fun, real moments and give guests something they’ll actually remember and share.
I’ve seen this happen at a lot of events. Everything’s planned properly. The place looks good, music’s sorted, people show up on time. For the first hour or so, it all feels like it’s going exactly how it should.
Then things level out.
Not in a bad way - just that point where people are there, but not fully in it yet. Small groups stick together, a few people drift, someone checks their phone for no reason. That’s usually when something small can change the whole feel.
A selfie booth does that, but in a very low-key way.
It Starts With One Person
No announcement, no instructions. Someone just walks up to it. Maybe they’re curious, maybe they’re just passing time. They tap the screen, take a quick photo, laugh at it, and call someone else over.
That’s how it spreads.
Not all at once. Not like a crowd forming. Just small groups, one after another, through the night. And somehow, it keeps going without anyone needing to manage it.
It’s Not About “Taking Photos”
Most of the photos aren’t even great. Someone’s mid-laugh, someone’s not ready, someone ruins the frame on purpose. But those are the ones people end up sending to each other later.
That’s the difference.
It’s not about getting a perfect picture - it’s about capturing whatever was happening in that exact second. And those moments don’t really come from posed setups.
Where It Usually Falls Apart
When it feels like effort. If someone walks up and has to think for even a few seconds - what to press, where to stand, how long it’ll take - -they’ll probably leave.
That’s just how events work. People don’t wait around.
So the booth has to feel obvious. Quick. Almost automatic. That’s where the setup matters more than the idea itself.
ClickPlick, for example, keeps it pretty straightforward. You don’t really notice anything technical happening - it just responds fast, takes the photo, and moves on. No delay, no confusion.
And because of that, people don’t hesitate to use it again.
You Don’t Have to Plan Around It
This is one of those things people overthink. You don’t need to schedule it or build anything around it. Just don’t hide it somewhere no one goes.
If people can see it, they’ll use it.
If they can’t, they won’t.
That’s about as complicated as it gets.
What People Actually Take Away
Not the setup. Not the features.
Just those random photos they didn’t expect to take.
And later, when the event’s over, those are the ones that stick.



