Showing posts with label cutout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cutout. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Office Christmas party themes, part 5

Hurrah for Hollywood!


Basing your office Christmas party on a particular theme will be certain to get your colleagues and friends talking before the big day, especially if they’re required to dress up for the occasion. The question is, what will appeal to your diverse mix of workmates?


We’ve already shared ideas about themed parties spanning decades from the 1920s to the 1980s and a casino-based event. But if none of them excite you, why not consider a Hollywood-themed affair instead?


Most people will have some interest in films or have a favourite actress or actor, so everyone should be able to get into the party spirit in one way or another. And with a theme like this, you can take it as far as your imagination and budget will allow.


Hollywood face masks
(pack of 6)
Invite your colleagues and friends to come dressed as an actual movie star for the night or to wear a tuxedo or evening gown. After all, if they want to feel like a movie star, it’s only fitting that they should look like one. A Charlie Chaplin outfit should be easy to put together for the men, while the women could transform themselves into Marilyn Monroe with the right dress, a blonde wig and red lips.



No Hollywood party would be complete without a red carpet to welcome the stars of the show. Encourage everyone to pose as they walk down it and, if possible, enroll a colleague or two to help you film them or take photographs. 

You could even ask one of your more extrovert team members to announce each guest as they walk down the red carpet and then interview them with questions such as, 'How do you feel about your new movie?’ or ‘Who designed your outfit tonight?’ If your guests are up for a bit of role-play, then this could be a really fun way to get them in the mood. There will undoubtedly be a few witty responses among your more good-humored work colleagues that will be sure to raise a few laughs. A red-carpet, lifesize stand-in cutout will also create a great photo opportunity and get everyone pairing up.



These film reels are perfect to use
as  table centrepiece or  decorations
You can go all out on jazzing up the party venue itself as there’s so much Hollywood paraphernalia available. Decorate the walls with clapperboards and Hollywood street sign cutouts, and adorn tables with film reel centrepieces, Lights! Camera! Action! confetti and black glittered star balloons with co-ordinating star balloon weights. And to help your workmates feel they’re in good company, you could even have them mingle with celebrity guests such as Daniel Craig or Marilyn Monroe – well, lifesize cutout versions of them anyway.


As far as the entertainment goes, you can organise anything from an awards event to a talent show. An entertainment trivia quiz on award-winning actors and films is likely to go down well, or why not hold a ‘name that tune’ contest and have your workmates guess which film each song came from.


Whether you create your Hollywood celebration on a grand or smale scale, one thing’s for certain. If you do it in style, it’s sure to be a bit hit.


Thursday, 21 November 2013

Office Christmas party themes, part 3


Swinging sixties, groovy seventies or new-wave eighties? Take your pick


A party with a focus tends to be a lot more fun. So, if you want to make your Christmas work do a bit special this year, read on to find out what you can do in the third of our Christmas office party blogs. 

You’ll be sure to impress the majority of your colleagues, especially if you cover a wide age range, with a 1960’s, 1970’s and 1980’s-themed party. By concentrating on not one but three decades, you should be able to please almost everyone because most people will probably have some connection with one of these periods and be keen to relive it again – even if it’s just for one night.

There’s so much you can do around this theme too. You’ll be spoiled for choice with the music. Just make sure that it’s not the songs of one particular era that get played all night. Rock and pop will go down well for the 1960s, with tunes from the likes of James Brown, the Hollies, the Beatles and the Beach Boys. For the 1970s, choose anything by ABBA to Al Green, Rod Stewart to Stevie Wonder. And when it comes to the 1980s, any of the hits by Michael Jackson, Wham!, Madonna or Duran Duran will ensure the night is one to remember.

You’ll really add a sense of fun to the event if you make it a requirement to dress up for the occasion. And there’s no excuse not to because there are so many looks to choose from. If a fan of the 1960s, go hippie with a flower power costume or be a cool dude in patterned trousers and waistcoat. When dressing for the 1970s, become the rock star that you’ve always dreamed about being or strut your stuff like John Travolta in a disco fever outfit. And if, like me, it’s the 1980s that’s the decade you remember most fondly, reinvent yourself as Boy George in a new wave pop star costume or bare all in a gold bustier and skirt in a fun Madonna-style 80s pop star ensemble.

To create the right atmosphere, decorate the venue with disco hanging swirls and a disco ball. And why not add a disco couple lifesize stand-in cutout at the entrance to provide a great photo opportunity. It’s sure to put everyone in a party mood.