NicePrint Photo Marks 20 Years With Personalized Keepsakes and Intimate Celebration
NicePrint Photo turned 20 with a murder mystery dinner where every guest received a personalized photo-based name booklet as a keepsake.

Twenty years in the photo printing business is worth celebrating with intention, and NicePrint Photo did exactly that. The Philippine-based company marked its milestone anniversary with a themed murder mystery dinner that functioned as both a company celebration and a deliberate act of client appreciation, held earlier this month.
The evening leaned into the kind of personalization that has defined NicePrint Photo's two decades of work. Each guest received a customized photo-based name booklet, a small keepsake that put the recipient's own image and identity at the center of the gift. It is the kind of detail that separates a memorable event from a forgettable one: the company that built its reputation on helping people preserve photographs used photographs to make every individual in the room feel specifically seen.
The murder mystery format gave the dinner a theatrical intimacy that a conventional gala rarely achieves. Guests were participants, not just attendees, which tends to produce the kind of shared experience that actually deepens loyalty rather than simply acknowledging it.
For anyone thinking about anniversary gifting, whether for a brand, a couple, or a milestone friendship, the NicePrint approach offers a useful framework. The most resonant gifts at any anniversary tend to circle back to the relationship itself: its history, its shared imagery, its inside language. A personalized photo booklet costs far less than a luxury centerpiece, but it carries the weight of genuine reflection. That is the distinction between a gift that gets set aside and one that gets kept.
NicePrint Photo's twenty-year mark lands at a moment when physical photo products have reasserted their emotional value in a culture oversaturated with digital images. The murder mystery dinner, small and curated by design, was a fitting expression of that philosophy.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

