14 Tips to Open Floating Entertainment Center
Floating Entertainment Center: Building a float for the local holiday parade is one of those projects which require careful planning, teamwork, design, and lots of effort.
Get your materials and helpers together before you dive into the project for a successful venture.

Floating Entertainment Center
Floating Entertainment Center
A sports theme or Christmas float will not fit in well at a Mardi Gras parade.
- Be realistic in the scope of your project. If you have a certain message you hope your float conveys, whether it is Christmas greetings or a patriotic theme, think small for your first venture into this type of project.
Floating Entertainment Center
3. Form a design team to work out the list of materials you will need and to assign specific work areas.
The complexity of the project may require painters, model builders, carpenters, and the like. Having someone talented or skilled in these areas will make the job much easier.
4. Find funding for the project.
Crepe paper, craft paper, flame retardant Floral Sheeting, poultry netting, paint, lumber, and all the other materials you may find you need are not cheap. Some local businesses like craft shops and hardware stores may be willing to donate, especially if their name can be incorporated as advertising in some non-obtrusive manner.
5. Pick the platform for your float.
Usually, this is a flatbed trailer of some sort, and it needs to be available for a fairly long period, and be in good condition. No parade master appreciates a broken down float in their show. Make sure your platform’s axle is rated for the amount of weight you putting on it.
6. Find a garage or other “out-of-the-weather” location for your work.
You will need room to fabricate the details of your float, as well as to set up your trailer for the actual installation of them.
7. Get your workers together.
If you are in a club, school class, or other organization, schedule work times and try to get commitments from the volunteers who sign on to help. This is where good leadership will come in handy.
Floating Entertainment Center
8. Skirt it.
Floating Entertainment Center
12. More tips
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Use bright, vibrant colors, and seasonal motifs where appropriate.
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Getting people to commit to the long hours of work, and getting them to act as a team is a big step toward success.
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Use a flatbed trailer. They are much much easier to decorate and work with.
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Choose a “boss” or leader. Like any complicated project, leadership is essential to success.
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There are countless designs for floats for many occasions. Ships, forts, Santa’s workshops, sports themes, flowers, romance, and others make wonderful projects for the appropriate occasions.
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Use the most economical flame retardant decorating products available. *Look at websites or magazine articles about parades to get ideas for your design. Mardi Gras parades are famous for theme type floats of all kinds.
Floating Entertainment Center
13. Plan your route
14. Things You’ll Need
- Some type of trailer and tow vehicle.
- Workers and artists.
- Paint, cardboard for backdrops, etc.
- Flame retardant tissue pomps or floral sheeting, festooning and fringe for props, skirts, etc.
- Lots of tape, scissors, regular and T50 staples & staple guns, and the like.
- Wood screws with Plumbers’ tape, hinges, or “L” brackets can secure props/backdrops/skirting to the deck
Conclusion
Never throw anything off afloat! If you want to distribute something, have walkers alongside hand them to the crowd (check with parade committee first)