

If you add this wow factor, then people will surely love to take shots of and by the photo mosaics. Photo mosaics can go a long away in creating more positive connections to your brand as your guests will keep on spreading the good word about your company.Ī brand-specific picture or logo can be integrated with images of all the people that made your event-and your company-special.

The unique, interactive nature of this process will bring your guests, employees, and special members together. Watching their photos create a finished mosaic is so much fun. The photos added to the mosaic wall can be fetched from Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram with a unique hashtag, or taken at an on-site photo booth. Due to our specialized printing process, we realize the highest printing quality on all materials offered. The photo mosaic on canvas is a piece of wall art that is composed of one main image and many tiny photos. The rule is: the larger the selection, the better the representation of the main motif. Attendees place their stickers on the selected square cells on the mosaic board to create a mosaic of custom photos. A photo mosaic can be created from a selection of 50 to several thousand individual photos. In a physical set-up, each of the guest’s photos is printed as adhesive stickers. Many sizes available with 24 hours overnight service. Only high-quality materials such as canvas, poster or acrylic glass are used for printing.
Photo mosaic art free#
The mosaic preview is always free of charge in two versions.

By photo mosaic i mean a picture generated from a collection of smaller photos arranged to represent the larger image. Upload up to 1,000 of your own photos the individual images will appear in a printed size of 2cm. You can create an overall message using the large cohesive portrait that’s made up of different identifiable pieces, which may have a specific artistic, personal meaning that connects with you or your brand.Ī photo mosaic wall will give guests a hands-on experience they won’t soon forget. Studio Artist user Charis Tsevis recently created several photo mosaic portraits for publication in the LA Times based on imagery from the 2008 Olympics.
