The Drape landing page template is built for trade show event decoration businesses that turn empty convention halls into immersive brand worlds. It uses a masonry gallery layout, cinematic scroll sequencing, Heritage and Story visual design, and a focused consultation form to convert exhibit managers and event planners into booked design sessions.
by Rocket studio
Drape is a single-page landing page template designed for trade show event decoration companies. It pairs editorial masonry display with a cinematic scroll journey to showcase immersive booth design work. The Cloud Canvas color system and Fraunces serif typography signal craft and authority. The page drives one clear action: booking a complimentary design consultation.
This template is built for businesses that create high-impact trade show displays, living walls, fabric installations, and branded environments for clients who stand in front of 40,000 attendees and need to command attention. It speaks directly to the vendor side of the trade show industry.
Most trade show decoration businesses rely on PDF portfolios, generic agency sites, or outdated galleries that fail to communicate the scale and craft of their work. A static page cannot capture the feeling of pushing through heavy curtains into a fully realized brand world. Prospective clients, particularly exhibit managers sweating a Q1 keynote, need to feel the quality of the work before they ever pick up the phone.
This template delivers a fully structured landing page focused on showcasing trade show event decoration work and driving consultation bookings. Every section serves a specific role in moving a visitor from curious to confident.




Theme
Heritage & Story
Creative direction
Cinematic Sequence
Color system
Cloud Canvas
Direction
Event Registration
Page Sections
Seasonal Full-viewport Hero Section
Staggered Editorial Masonry Gallery
Behind-the-scenes Process Scroll
Scroll-triggered Floating Call-to-action
Narrative Consultation Form
Named Testimonials with Event Metrics
Who is this landing page template designed for?
Can this template showcase different booth sizes and types?
What makes the consultation form different from a standard contact form?
Does the masonry gallery support both finished work and process content?
Is this template suited for businesses active across multiple trade shows per year?
This template is built around six core capabilities, each designed to support the specific goals of a trade show decoration business showcasing immersive booth environments.
The hero section fills the full viewport with a wide installation photograph taken at golden hour. The serif headline fades up from center on load. The seasonal image rotates quarterly, so returning visitors encounter a fresh display tied to spring, summer, autumn, or winter, keeping the page feeling alive between trade shows.
The masonry layout displays finished booth design work in staggered tiles of varying scale and proportion, creating visual density similar to a curated Pinterest board. Each tile is a different industry, a different mood, a different scale. Tab filtering allows visitors to sort the display by project type, and hover states in tarnished brass surface the booth details beneath each image.
As visitors scroll deeper, the masonry transitions from completed trade show displays to in-progress process content: sketches pinned to corkboard, fabric swatches stapled to mood boards, time-lapse stills of a bare hall floor becoming a branded environment. This narrative-driven sequence builds trust by showcasing the craft behind every booth, not just the finished result.
After the third masonry row, a floating "Reserve Your Design Session" button activates via scroll trigger. This persistent prompt captures visitors at peak engagement, exactly when they have seen enough trade show booth work to feel motivated but have not yet reached the bottom form. The float trigger is pre-configured and requires no additional setup.
The page closes with a full-width form section using the Arc Browser Split layout. The form collects event name, venue city, booth size (inline, island, or custom), show dates, and one open narrative field: "Describe the feeling you want attendees to walk away with." That final question positions the company as a creative collaborator, not a commodity vendor, and lowers resistance at the moment of submission.
Named testimonials from exhibit managers appear with company names, show names, and booth attendance metrics. This section provides social proof grounded in the real language of the trade show industry, reinforcing brand visibility and signaling experience with high-stakes events.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero viewport | Display seasonal installation photograph with fade-up headline and primary call-to-action |
| Masonry gallery | Showcase finished trade show booth work in staggered editorial tiles |
| Process sequence | Reveal behind-the-scenes sketches, swatches, and time-lapse stills |
| Floating call-to-action | Trigger consultation button after third masonry row on scroll |
| Testimonials block | Present named social proof with show metrics and booth callouts |
| Consultation form | Capture visitor details and narrative brief for design session booking |
The Cloud Canvas color system gives this template the feel of a hand-bound production portfolio left open on a worktable. The palette is warm, heritage-editorial, and deliberately restrained so that the installation photography carries the visual weight.
The template is designed desktop-first, reflecting the reality that exhibit managers and agency creative directors typically review vendor options at a desk. Mobile fallback is fully structured so the page remains usable and persuasive on smaller screens without breaking the masonry layout or the form.
The page is structured around a single conversion goal: booking a design consultation. Every design and content decision moves the visitor one step closer to hitting submit on the consultation form.
This template sits at the intersection of the Wedding and Events category and the Trade Show Event Decoration niche, making it well suited for businesses that operate across both high-end event markets and the specialized world of trade shows. The design ideas embedded in its structure reflect proven principles for showcasing immersive booth environments.