10 Creative Photo Booth Poses Your Guests Will Love
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March 10, 20262 min read

10 Creative Photo Booth Poses Your Guests Will Love

Every photo booth session starts the same way: a group of people steps in, someone holds up a peace sign, and everyone smiles. There is nothing wrong with that — but the real magic happens when guests get creative. Here are ten poses our attendants love to suggest.

The Movie Poster Have the group strike a dramatic pose as if they are on the poster for an action film. Someone points into the distance, someone crosses their arms, someone looks over their shoulder. The black and white treatment makes this look incredible.

The Candid Laugh Instead of posing, we tell everyone to look at the person on their left and say something ridiculous. The resulting genuine laughter makes for the most natural, joyful photos of the night.

The Prom Photo Couples stand in a classic prom pose — hands on waist, standing slightly angled — and we capture the sweetness. Works beautifully for weddings and anniversary parties.

The Jump Shot We count to three and everyone jumps. The mid-air moment, with hair flying and expressions of pure delight, is always a crowd favorite. It takes a couple of tries but the result is worth it.

The Serious Portrait Everyone puts on their most serious, stoic expression — think old Victorian family portrait. The contrast between their formal faces and the festive setting is comedy gold, and it looks stunning in black and white.

The Group Hug Simple but effective. Everyone piles in for a genuine bear hug and we capture the warmth. These photos consistently end up being the ones guests post on social media.

The Reaction Shot One person whispers something to the group, and we capture everyone reacting at once — shock, laughter, disbelief. The expressions are always priceless.

The Silly Prop Stack Challenge the group to wear as many props as possible at once. Hats on top of hats, multiple sunglasses, scarves layered over boas. The absurdity is the whole point.

The Looking Away Everyone faces away from the camera and looks back over one shoulder. It sounds simple but creates a surprisingly dramatic and editorial result.

The Storyteller This works best for a sequence of photos: tell a tiny story across three or four frames. Meet, argue, make up, celebrate. Guests love the creative challenge and the resulting strips are one-of-a-kind keepsakes.