Center Island

Outdoor or island booths open on all four sides

Center Island booth layout diagram
Drawn to scale · view from above · aisle at the marked edge

For when you have all four sides — a standalone outdoor spot, a true island placement, or the end of a row. One or two tables down the middle and customers walk around you in a full circle. It's the most social layout. You can greet people from any angle, and there's no dead back wall hiding half your inventory. The trade-off is security: no walls behind you means nowhere to stash valuables, and you'll spend more time watching the booth from the center. Best for a tight range with pieces that look good from every side — pottery, wood, metalwork — and for vendors comfortable chatting with shoppers coming from every direction.

What you’ll use

The pieces that make up this layout. Each color matches the category pill you’ll see in the editor — so the diagram above reads the same as the app.

  • 2×4ft TableTables
  • 1×Payment CounterTables

Tips from the setup

  1. 01

    Put a pedestal or riser dead-center with your best piece on top. Eye-level from any angle.

  2. 02

    Keep 3 feet of walking space clear on every side. Any tighter and it bottlenecks at peak.

  3. 03

    Run checkout from one of the long sides, not the middle, so you face the busier aisle.

  4. 04

    Bring a full canopy weight setup — you can't anchor to a back wall that isn't there.

Other layouts to consider

Make this layout your own

Free to start. Move things around to match your actual gear. Save it once, reuse it every event.