What Is an Event Style Guide?
An event style guide is a structured document that captures every visual and experiential decision for an event — before a single item is purchased or a single vendor is hired. It covers the concept, the color palette, the décor elements, the sourcing plan, and the timeline.
For event planners and stylists, it serves two purposes: it keeps you organized during execution, and it gives clients something tangible to approve before money is spent. A well-built style guide eliminates the guesswork and the last-minute pivots that cost you time and money.
A style guide is not a mood board. A mood board is inspiration. A style guide is a plan. One is a starting point — the other is what you execute from.
"Most events that don't fully come together aren't a creativity problem. They're a structure problem. The vision was there — the system wasn't."
What a Complete Style Guide Includes
Before we walk through how to build one, here's what a complete event style guide should cover:
- Event Concept — a written description of the overall vision, mood, and atmosphere
- Color Palette — 3 to 4 colors with hex codes and usage notes (primary, accent, neutral)
- Décor Elements — specific items organized by zone or category (florals, linens, tabletop, lighting, backdrop)
- Sourcing Guide — where to buy, rent, or hire each item
- Timeline — a date-aware plan from booking vendors to event day
- Budget Breakdown — estimated costs per category with room for actual vendor quotes
Step by Step: How to Build It
Start With the Concept, Not the Colors
Most planners start with Pinterest boards and colors. Start with words instead. Write 3 to 5 sentences describing the feeling of the event — not what it looks like, but how it feels. Words like "intimate," "grand," "garden-fresh," "sleek and modern," or "warm and golden" give you a filter for every decision that comes after. If a décor item doesn't fit the feeling, it doesn't make it into the guide.
Lock Your Color Palette to 3 or 4 Colors
Choose one dominant color, one accent color, and one to two neutrals. Assign each a hex code so vendors, printers, and rental companies are working from the same reference. A common mistake is choosing too many colors — it fragments the visual story. Two dominant colors per scene is the rule. Everything else is a neutral.
Map Your Décor by Zone, Not by Category
Don't list "florals" as one line item. Break the event space into zones — entrance, ceremony, cocktail, reception tables, bar, dessert table, photo backdrop — and specify what goes in each zone. This is how you catch gaps before event day, and it's how you present to clients in a way that actually lands. They can visualize each moment of their event instead of reading a generic list.
Tag Every Item as Buy, Rent, or Hire
For each décor element, note whether the client should buy it, rent it, or hire a vendor to supply it. This single decision affects budget, logistics, and timeline. Rental items need to be reserved weeks in advance. Purchased items need lead time for shipping. Vendor-supplied items need contracts. Building this into the style guide from the start prevents expensive surprises.
Build the Timeline Backward From the Event Date
Start with the event date and work backward. A well-structured timeline covers three phases: early planning (venue, anchor vendors, overall concept), mid-planning (rentals, florals, detailed sourcing), and final week (delivery confirmations, setup logistics, day-of schedule). The earlier the event date, the more compressed the timeline — which means fewer options and higher vendor costs. Build the guide to reflect the real timeline your client is working with.
Add a Budget Tracker as the Final Layer
Build a two-column tracker: estimated cost versus actual vendor quote. This becomes your working document as quotes come in. It also becomes a client-facing document when they need to understand where money is going. The gap between estimated and actual is where most event budgets fall apart — tracking it in the style guide keeps everyone accountable from the start.
How Long Does It Take to Build a Style Guide?
Done manually — researching vendors, writing the concept, building the timeline, formatting everything into a presentable document — a thorough style guide takes three to five hours per event. Magnivé generates the same output in 60 seconds. For new planners juggling multiple clients or their first few events, that time difference is everything.
The goal isn't to skip the thinking. It's to remove the formatting, the blank-page paralysis, and the structural decisions so you can spend that time on the creative work that actually differentiates you.
"The planners who look established aren't working harder. They have a system that makes their work visible."
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Starting with visuals before the concept — inspiration without a filter creates incoherent results
- Too many colors — more than four dominant colors fragments the visual story
- No zone breakdown — listing items without placing them creates gaps on event day
- Missing the sourcing tag — "florals" is not a plan; "rent from local wholesaler, book 6 weeks out" is
- Generic timelines — a timeline that doesn't reflect the actual event date is decoration, not a plan
- No budget column — style guides without cost tracking lead to client surprises
Magnivé builds your complete style guide in 60 seconds
Concept, palette, zone-by-zone décor, sourcing guide, date-aware timeline, and budget tracker — all generated from your event details. No blank page. No formatting. Just a complete, client-ready guide.
Get Early AccessWhat Makes a Style Guide Client-Ready
A style guide you use internally is different from one you present to a client. Client-ready means it's formatted, clearly labeled, and tells a story — not just a list of items. The concept section should read like a vision. The color palette should be visual, not just text. The décor breakdown should be organized by the moments of their event, not by product category.
When a client can read through your style guide and feel their event before it happens, you've done the job. That's what separates planners who close clients easily from planners who struggle to communicate their value.
The Bottom Line
An event style guide is not optional — it's the difference between an event that comes together and one that almost does. It protects you from scope creep, aligns clients before money is spent, and gives you a clear execution path from the first vendor call to the final breakdown.
Build the habit of creating one for every event, regardless of budget or scale. The structure is what makes your vision executable — and what makes your work look as good on event day as it did in your head.
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