Happy New Year

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Thanks for checking our our blog and remember to reserve a photobooth at your next party. Happy New Year everyone!

free “apple photo booth” software for your PC

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http://www.cyberlink.com/multi/download/trials_125_ENU.html So PC users have long been jealous of mac users and their free photobooth sofware that comes with their operating system. However, now PC users can get similar photo booth software for use in mobile photobooths or just for fun from the web site above. Like any thing free there is a hook.  You need to sign up for some kind of internet based business like "emusic" or some other "free" service" just cancel before they bill your credit card. Now wouldn't it be fun to use the distorted photobooth effects at a party or social event. I can see the "cone head" effect being used at the next star trek convention.

Suggested poses for a photobooth rental

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SUGGESTED POSES FOR PHOTO-BOOTH PICTURES.

BY TED TRAVELSTEAD and his web site:

(a) Big ol' cheesy smile (b) "I am not a crook" face with double peace sign (c) Doin' the funky chicken

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(a) Sticking tongue out (b) Wearing fuzzy top hat, giving thumbs-up (c) Showing off your rare fourth nipple

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(a) Hands on pretend steering wheel (b) Cheerfully letting in a pretend hitchhiker (c) Being held at pretend knifepoint while not pretending to soil yourself

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(a) "May I take your order?" with imaginary pad and pen in hand (b) Preparing an imaginary tableside Caesar salad (c) Performing the Heimlich on an imaginary portly hedge-fund manager

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(a) Naked and covered in fudge (b) Bewildered by flash, naked, and covered in fudge (c) Tongue-bathing self in a panic after waking up from self-hypnosis tape

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(a) Showing off your stylish summer cape with a flourish (b) You, a fashionable blurry twirling dervish (c) Wiping your breakfast off wall with summer cape

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(a) Cowboy hat, hands on pretend gun belt showdown-style (b) A tip of the hat to the pretty ladies as they stroll past the saloon (c) Cutting open and crawling inside your dead horse to avoid freezing to death in the icy blasts of 40-below gale-force prairie winds

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(a) Arm in arm, with your fiancée, as she holds up her new engagement ring (b) Bickering politely over what the next pose should be (c) Peeking from the closet at your wife of many years, who smiles through tear-filled eyes as she desperately tries to please you by "gettin' it on" with your burly neighbor, Kurtis

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(a) Peacocking for the paparazzi on the red carpet at the premiere of your cinematic masterpiece (b) Smoking a cigarette nonchalantly by the pool while half-listening to an eager interviewer (c) Sweating profusely, cheap black hair dye running from your graying temples, as you desperately plead for a walk-on role in a C-movie about a ghost clown so you can afford one more week in a seedy North Hollywood motel

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(a) You are a child again, running free in a field of swaying grass, not a care in the world (b) Cradling a huge and garishly colored snow cone at the neighborhood pool's snack bar, your tongue a multiflavored rainbow-hued palette (c) Clutching your aching stomach and flipping the light switch on and off continuously while trying not to think of your parents' impending divorce

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(a) Standing on the pitcher's mound, glove and ball to chest, coolly staring down the league's MVP (b) Riding high, on the shoulders of your teammates, after pitching your third no-hitter (c) Sitting next to your walker, under a state-fair tent, shoulder throbbing like the dickens, signing "souvenir game balls" for $4 a pop

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(a) Sword held high, standing your ground against a ferocious lava-drooling dragon (b) Hoisting the dragon's head triumphantly skyward, as the just-saved princess clutches your armor-clad legs (c) Shaking the family dachshund upside down so it doesn't choke on your 12-sided die that it just gobbled up

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(a) Fedora cocked rakishly, .38 snubnose under your coat, you lean back in your desk chair as the femme fatale's shadow falls across the frosted glass of your office door (b) You pour her a shot of rye to soothe her frayed nerves, and top off your third double of the day, as she dishes out her tale of woe (c) "It's not fair!" you cry out in a high-pitched voice as the judge sentences you to a six-month stint for unlawful possession of a firearm and impersonating an officer of the law

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Review photobooth artist

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http://www.danielminnick.com/  http://flickr.com/photos/23311503@N03/  Well every artist has to have their medium and for Daniell Minnick, it seems to be the photobooth itself. Interesting work in the above two web sites. Check it out and if you want to rent a photobooth from us please check our our main web site!

For a Quarter

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rentphotobooths_review The article below was taken from Smithstonian. The below link contains a video that is great. It shows how the insides of an old photobooth look like an a little on how they work. http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1484342887/bclid1213953670/bctid1753815427 Below is an article about the author and is also an interesting read. Reprinted from American Photobooth (c) Näkki Goranin. With permission of the publisher, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. Do you have an image taken in a photobooth that you would like to share? Mail smithsonianmagazine@si.edu to Share Your Photobooth Picture! Nakki Goranin and I squeeze into a cramped photobooth in a Vermont shopping mall and practice our expressions. Goranin, a veteran, tries out some wacky poses, sticking her tongue out and squinting at the lens. I'm a bit more inhibited and, as the camera clicks off four shots, stick with a bemused smile. A minute later, the machine spits out a photo strip. "I love them," says Goranin of the photos. "They're the real Nakki." Goranin, who lives in Burlington and has just published an illustrated history of the machine, American Photobooth, asks me to sign and date the back of the strip, just as she did in the late 1960s growing up in Chicago and sharing photobooth photos with her friends. The routine is familiar to the generations of Americans who documented everyday moments by jumping inside a booth and popping a quarter into the slot. Still, Goranin doesn't much care for the mall's machine, which is digital—the print quality is not what it used to be. But, she says, there are only about 250 authentic chemical booths left in the United States, and she knows of none available to the public in Vermont. As Goranin, a photographer and self-described romantic, sees it, photo strips tell the story of 20th-century American history from the ground up. The images in her new book, culled from thousands she has collected at auctions, flea markets and antiques stores, show down-at-the-heels farmers in overalls, wartime sweethearts and 1950s boys with greased hair and ducktails. She points out a photo of a World War II-era couple kissing passionately. "Day before he left," the notation reads. Before the photobooth first appeared, in the 1920s, most portraits were made in studios. The new, inexpensive process made photography accessible to everyone. "For 25 cents people could go and get some memory of who they were, of a special occasion, of a first date, an anniversary, a graduation," Goranin says. "For many people, those were the only photos of themselves that they had." Because there is no photographer to intimidate, photobooth subjects tend to be much less self-conscious. The result—a young boy embracing his mother or teenagers sneaking a first kiss—is often exceptionally intimate. "It's like a theater that's just you and the lens," Goranin says. "And you can be anyone you want to be." Goranin's photobooth obsession began after her mother died in 1999. She needed to continue her photography, but couldn't focus on her work or bring herself to go back into the darkroom. Frequenting photobooths was the answer, she says. After a while, Goranin got the idea to publish her collection of self-portraits—now part of the permanent collection of the International Center for Photography in New York City—along with a brief history of the machine. But she was surprised by the dearth of information about the machine's origins or development; she set off from her cozy white Vermont house to see what she could discover for herself. That was nine years ago. Goranin pored through microfilm of old newspapers. She drove back and forth across the United States and Canada interviewing anyone connected with the business that she could track down. When she telephoned the son of a long-dead early photobooth operator, she learned that only the day before, he had thrown away a trove of vintage photographs and business records. Goranin persuaded him to climb into a Dumpster to retrieve the items. Goranin even bought her own fully functioning 1960s-era photobooth and is now restoring two others that she also purchased. The history she eventually put together chronicles the rapid rise and remarkable longevity of the machine. In the 1920s, an enterprising Siberian immigrant named Anatol Josepho perfected a fully automated process that produced a positive image on paper, eliminating the need not only for negatives but for operators as well. His "Photomaton" studio, which opened in 1926 on Broadway in New York City, was an immediate hit. Crowds lined up to pay 25 cents for a strip of eight photos. Within a few years, photobooths could be found from Paris to Shanghai. Even amid the worldwide depression of the 1930s, the photobooth continued to grow. Entrepreneurs who couldn't afford to buy the real thing built their own versions, some out of wood, then hid a photographer in the back who shot and developed the pictures and slipped them through a slot. The unsuspecting subjects were none the wiser. By mid-century, photobooths were ubiquitous. Jack and Jackie Kennedy stepped into one in the 1950s. Yoko Ono and John Lennon included a reproduction strip with their 1969 recording, "Wedding Album." In the 1960s, Andy Warhol shuttled models with rolls of quarters from booth to booth in New York City. A 1965 Time magazine cover features Warhol's photobooth portraits of "Today's Teen-Agers." These days digital photobooths, which became available in the 1990s, let users add novelty messages and backgrounds and delete and retake shots. Allen Weisberg, president of Apple Industries, which has manufactured digital booths since 2001, says digital photobooth sales continue to grow. "Photobooths have made a tremendous resurgence," he says. "It's like apple pie and baseball. It's part of our heritage." The digital booths are being used in new ways. Lately, a number of companies have popped up offering rentals of lightweight, portable photobooths for use at weddings and parties. But Goranin and other purists long for the real McCoy with its distinctive smell, clanking machinery and the fraught anticipation that comes with waiting for the photos to appear. A Web site, Photobooth.net, documents the locations of a dwindling number of these mechanical dinosaurs. "The old chemistry booths, which I love, are becoming harder and harder to find," says Goranin. "But the [digital] booth is still a fun experience. You still get great photos. You still have a wonderful time in them. You still have the old-fashioned curtains that you can draw and that sense of mystery." Goranin smiles. "There's nothing in the world like a photobooth." Kenneth R. Fletcher last wrote about Richard Misrach's beach images.

Best Photobooth rental pictures in the world

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http://thetraceyfragments.blogspot.com/2007/08/photo-booth.html Supposedly Ellen takes the best photo booth rental pictures in the world. Check it out and let me know if you agree.

Should you purchase liability insurance 4 your photo booth rental?

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I've been in the wedding business a very long time and I've yet to hear any photobooths needing a liability insurance claim. But who knows truth is actually stranger than fiction sometimes.  If you are going to rent an older historical venue for your wedding reception be aware that competitors that rent out the vintage booths that literally weight 700 pounds can cause damage to delicate wood or marble floors.  Makes sure the company you rent from has a standard one million dollar liability coverage so if anything does go wrong you can't be held liable.

Rentphotobooths.com review

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In reviewing photobooth companies you'll find that few offer the number of options that www.rentphotobooths.com does. We can make custom layouts, add text to the photo strips and also do double sided photo strips. You could have an engagement photo on one side and a thank you note below or on the other side. You could also have a custom intials on one side and custom colors to match your wedding day colors. If you review rentphotobooths web site you will also see we offer the prints in a variety of sizes. We are the only photobooth company in the nation that can do Poster size 8"x48" long photostrips using the fastest photo printer in the world, the Kodak ML-500. Thanks for taking the time to review rentphotobooths.com!

Another photobooth mall prank, pretty cute

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Photo-Me USA is sold due to poor performance

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Photo-Me shares surge on sale of US vending unit

Mon Jul 21, 2008 5:43am EDT

LONDON, July 21 (Reuters) - Britain's Photo-Me International (PHTM.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) added more than ten percent to its market value on Monday, after it sold its loss-making U.S. vending business. Photo-Me, which operates about 21,000 photo booths in railway stations, airports and shopping centres, said the sale of Auto Photo Systems Inc and its unit, Photo-Me USA LLC., would yield a small exceptional profit. Photo-Me shares gained 13 percent to 13.25 pence at 0928 GMT, valuing the entire firm at about 48 million pounds. No financial details were provided, but Photo-Me said the U.S. business, which operated 250 photobooths, or about 1 percent of its group total, made a pre-tax loss of 700,000 pounds ($1.39 million) on revenues of 1.2 million pounds in the fiscal year just ended. Jean-Claude Perrottey, a former employee of Photo-Me, bought the business, the company said. "The USA has always been a limited market for ID photography and US vending has tended to be loss-making in recent years," Photo-Me said in the statement. "The disposal is part of Photo-Me's strategy to divest of small, remote and loss-making businesses and to focus on development and diversification of its well-established businesses. "The USA remains an important market for Photo-Me's equipment sales activities." (Reporting by Hsu Chuang Khoo; Editing by David Cowell)  This is pretty significant news in the photobooth world. I wonder what will happen to those 250 booths out there?  Maybe they will have some good deals on close out photo booths for sale?