hide
Refer Friends. Get $10*

New York City

  • A
  • C
  • D
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • Canada
  • Other Countries
x hide

Oh no... You're too late for this Groupon!

Sign up for our daily email so you never miss another Groupon!

Garden State Photo Studio – On Location

Three-Hour Photo-Booth Rental ($1,200 Value)

$595
Buy
No Longer Available
Tue Dec 04 04:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$1,200
Discount
50%
You Save
$605
  • T460x279
  • Party Planner
  • Photographic

In a Nutshell

Attendant sets up and dismantles photo booth, which captures candid moments with props and gives the host a downloadable link of images

The Fine Print

  • Expires May 29, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy multiple as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. Reservation required 2 weeks in advance; subject to availability. Extra $3 fee per mile outside 40mi of 07632.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Unlike an elevator ride at CIA headquarters, a photo-booth experience is fun when crammed with other people and rarely leads to removal by armed guards. Make faces at hidden cameras without fear with this Groupon.

$595 for a Three-Hour Photo-Booth Rental ($1,200 Value)

A trained assistant sets up, takes down, and helms the photo booth for three hours. The booth prints two copies of 2”x6” photo strips per shoot, and clients may access all photos through a downloadable link. Guests can peruse all the images in an online photo gallery available for 60 days following the event. Garden State Photo Studio hosts six types of photo booths. To reserve a specific booth, a $100 reservation fee is required; otherwise, one will be automatically assigned based on availability. Customers have the option to add features to their rentals for additional fees, including one extra hour of photo-booth usage for $150, a USB drive with all images taken by the photo booth for an additional $35 plus shipping and handling, or a photo-booth scrapbook for guests to sign for $150.

Garden State Photo Studio

Beyond its work staging traditional photo shoots and portraiture, Garden State Photo Studio's team of event photojournalists is dispatched to special occasions to tell their stories. As celebrations such as weddings, sweet sixteens, and bar mitzvahs unfold, photogs follow the belles of the ball, snapping or videotaping a chronology of candid moments with their professional-grade digital cameras and lighting equipment.

Garden State’s traveling photo booths fuel party-time fun and memory-making. After attendants set up the stationary photographer, party-goers pile in as the booth snaps pictures of the revelry. Instant images are printed onto strips and posted online so that guests can relive the memories later or ask the photo booth accusingly why it took so many pictures of Karen.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Famous Hats

Every historical figure of any significance wore a now instantly recognizable hat, synonymous with their name:

  • The Napoleon Hat: Military bicorn, worn side to side or "athwart" to serve as a better perch for enlisted falcons
  • The Benjamin Franklin Hat: Small brass beanie with a large conductive spire jutting out of it, topped with a small eyelet for tethering a kite
  • The Davy Crockett Hat: Famously a strict vegetarian, Crockett's "coonskin" was actually just a matted blob of reeds and buffalo chips that he moistened hourly from his canteen
  • The Hercules Hat: Just a minotaur skull

Honorable Mention: Jughead's "hat" from the Archie comics is actually a crown (?) made of gray paper (?) with miscellaneous shapes affixed to it. Details remain vague because it is proven that overscrutinizing Jughead's hat makes you go insane.

Which historical figure had the most famous hat? The answer may surprise you.

Garden State Photo Studio

Reviews