How to Turn Your iPhone Into a 360 Photo Booth
You don't need a GoPro, a laptop, or desktop rendering software to run a 360 booth. A modern iPhone shoots better slow motion than most action cameras — you just need the right app and mount.
Quick answer: Mount an iPhone on a 360 spinner arm, install BoothLab, set your frame rate (up to 240 fps) and slow-mo range, and you have a complete 360 photo booth: capture, branded rendering, and QR delivery all happen on the phone itself.
Why an iPhone beats a GoPro for 360 booths
- True 240 fps slow motion at 720p/1080p, and 4K recording — with far better low-light handling than action cams at indoor events.
- Everything on one device: GoPro workflows need a phone or laptop anyway for processing and sharing. With BoothLab the capture, overlay rendering, and QR code happen on the same iPhone, seconds after the spin.
- Multiple lenses: switch between wide and ultra-wide in-app to frame 1 guest or 4 without moving the arm.
What you need
- An iPhone (iOS 14 or later; any model with 240 fps slow-mo is ideal).
- A 360 spinner platform with a phone mount on the rotating arm.
- Even lighting — an LED tube or ring pointed at the platform.
- BoothLab, free on the App Store.
Set it up in BoothLab
- Mount the iPhone on the spinner arm in portrait, counterweighted per your platform's manual.
- Open Settings in BoothLab and pick a preset — e.g. 1280×720p @ 240 fps for maximum slow-mo, or 4K for crisp daytime events.
- Set record time and slow-mo range: an 8-second spin with slow motion starting at second 1 for a 3-second burst is a proven crowd-pleaser. Add the reverse effect for the boomerang-style comeback.
- Choose your lens so guests stay fully in frame through the whole rotation.
- Add branding and music — overlay, intro, outro, and MP3 — then record a test spin. BoothLab processes in the background and shows a QR code for instant download.
Pro tips
- Lock exposure before the event starts so brightness doesn't pump as the arm swings past light sources.
- Use the built-in flash option for dim dance floors.
- Turn on background processing and keep the line moving — videos finish rendering while the next group spins.