Feb 2026
Everything is illuminated in the corporate showroom, including holograms

What is magic in a movie becomes a tool in the showroom: hologram-like technologies attract attention, explain complex content spatially and create unforgettable brand moments. The decisive factor here is not the effect – but the impact on visitors, dialogs and decisions. We explain which hologram technologies offer real added value for corporate showrooms.
Holograms fascinate spectators and visitors
You can see it, the fear, the nervousness, but also the hope: when the small, rolling metal box R2-D2 projects Princess Leia’s message into the room and her hologram asks Obi-Wan Kenobi for help, he sits spellbound in front of Leia’s image. The scene from “Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope” from 1977 defined the image of the floating hologram in pop culture.
Holograms have fascinated people since their invention by Hungarian-British physicist Dennis Gabor, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971 for his work. A hologram stores not only an image, but also the complete light information of an object – including depth and perspective. You can “look around” a hologram: as the viewer moves, the view of the object changes – just like with a real object.
Real holograms do not exist – but hologram effects do.
Genuine, free-floating, three-dimensional holograms in the physical sense do not yet exist. They fail because holography does not reconstruct objects, but rather their light waves. However, light is not visible without a material surface. And yet there are representations that are often referred to as holograms – because they mimic the effects of a hologram using other technology.
Hologram-like technology can be seen today by anyone visiting the ABBA musical in London. Such technologies are also standard in interactive corporate showrooms today. When done well, hologram-like presentations can stimulate conversation, make content easier to understand and support decision-making. This creates immersive brand spaces that offer real decision-making and sales support.
They have long since gone beyond the Star Wars example. Effects that still seemed futuristic in Tom Cruise’s cinema hit “Minority Report” are now part of everyday life in corporate showrooms. There are possibilities just like in the film: for example, information can float in space and you can delve deeper into it with body movements.
We present the five most important hologram effects, demonstrate how they work, and explain where they offer real added value with a wow effect in product presentations in interactive showrooms.
1. Pepper’s Ghost: Floating content as a precise explanatory tool
The Pepper’s Ghost effect is one of the best-known technologies, often referred to as a hologram in a showroom context. An image is projected from the side and reflected into the room via a semi-transparent glass pane or special film. To visitors, it appears as if a three-dimensional object is floating freely in the room.
This technique is particularly suitable for products and technical systems. To achieve the desired effect, viewers must stand close to the object, which is often displayed in a glass case with a dark background. This creates a sense of proximity – a focused situation: objective, precise, calm. Pepper’s Ghost does not rely on room-filling amazement, but on detailed explanation. Interaction is also possible via touch controls on the display case or gestures.

Robust, precise and cost-effective. Pepper’s Ghost technology projects floating content, providing a personalised experience for each viewer. In this example, an image is projected downwards from a monitor. Viewers can see the image from three sides and engage in conversation.
Investing in a Pepper’s Ghost system is often economical, with predictable costs. The installation is robust, requires little maintenance and can be used 24/7.
Conclusion: Pepper’s Ghost delivers floating content for focused one-to-one situations between viewer and content. A cost-effective and precise explanatory medium, without any big surprises.
2. LED fan displays: Stop! There’s something to see here!
LED fans are the “neon sign” among hologram technologies. Such a system attracts attention from a distance, marks zones and creates an innovative, technological impression.
Technically speaking, LED fan displays are rotating LED modules whose fast-spinning light strips create images and animations that appear to our eyes as free-floating 3D objects in space. Resolution and detail are limited, text is barely legible, and interaction is only possible indirectly. Visitors usually only view the content for a relatively short time. In corporate showrooms, such systems are well suited for entrance areas or as visual markers – they are “stoppers”, not explanatory media.
LED fan displays generate noise, need to be placed at a distance from the audience for safety reasons, and work best in relatively dark environments. In corporate showrooms, LED fans are therefore usually seen behind glass, which creates distance.

A magical tool that attracts attention and draws the eye: fast-rotating LED fans in a tall Plexiglas tube are ideal for displaying people in three dimensions in a room. An accent lighting technique that can be controlled like a monitor.
Conclusion: LED fan displays are accent media. In the entrance area, they attract attention and draw the eye – ideally to other systems that excel in proximity and depth of detail.
3. Volumetric displays: For genuine, in-depth understanding
Volumetric displays use multiple overlapping displays to create a three-dimensional effect that offers many advantages for corporate showrooms. They are the explanatory medium among hologram effects. Each layer displays its own content, creating spatial depth through interaction. Typical areas of application include cutaway models of machines, buildings or organic structures in the medical or pharmaceutical sector. Volumetric displays demonstrate their strengths wherever internal structures, processes or multi-layered systems need to be made understandable.
Multiple interested parties can view content simultaneously and from different angles, which creates a much stronger sense of presence and promotes interaction. Depending on the technology used, volumetric displays also work in normal room lighting. They are also dialogue media – in most cases, you can switch between systems or show or hide individual layers using touch controls or a tablet.

Conceptual representation of a volumetric display in the form of a display case (AI-generated image)
The acquisition costs are rather high – but the closed systems are robust and have no mechanical parts, which makes them low-maintenance.
Conclusion: Volumetric displays do not just amaze viewers for a few milliseconds; they are a long-lasting tool for spatial understanding.
4. Transparent displays
Transparent displays are particularly suitable for corporate showrooms where physical objects and digital information need to be directly linked. The content appears on transparent surfaces, acting as a precise information window: the product remains visible, while content appears to be visible in front of it in the room. This allows product variants, statuses, data layers or internal structures to be displayed without obscuring the object itself.
Transparent displays excel in terms of information density and interactivity. Touch and multi-touch interaction enable visitors to control content themselves, switch between scenarios or call up details. Transparent displays are robust, low-maintenance and suitable for continuous operation. They also function in normal room lighting, but require careful background design to avoid reflections and loss of contrast.

Transparent displays are an explanatory medium with almost endless possibilities. They help viewers understand complex products, technical systems or configuration processes by enabling them to look deeper.
Conclusion: Transparent displays are the right choice when content needs to be conveyed in a clear, structured manner directly on the object itself. Ideal for complex products, technical systems or configuration processes.
5. Projection onto thin fabric panels: large, theatrical, emotional
As early as 1990, David Bowie used videos projected onto thin, virtually invisible fabric panels during his “Sound+Vision” tour. These projections onto textiles are also known as holo-gauze or holo-net. They are the “theatrical medium” among hologram technologies and remind audiences of classic science fiction holograms. They are particularly effective when it comes to atmosphere, staging and emotional introductions. They create large-scale images that appear to float freely in space.
In corporate showrooms, they are ideal for brand moments, scenic transitions or as a dramatic start to a customer journey. Projections onto thin fabric panels also enable very large hologram effects and can be used in a wide variety of scenarios.
They are only suitable as a medium for information or dialogue to a limited extent. In addition, the technology is highly dependent on the room, lighting and viewing angles. Bright environments, backlighting or unfavourable projection angles significantly weaken the effect. This large-scale system requires particularly intensive planning.

The Samurai Museum in Berlin-Mitte boasts a collection of over 4,000 authentic Japanese artefacts, including this centuries-old teahouse. Projecting an image onto a thin fabric creates a fantastic effect without altering the historical site.
Conclusion: Projections onto textiles are suitable as a scenographic highlight with virtually no size restrictions – less so for explanatory content or consulting situations.
Hologram effects as strategic tools
Hologram-like effects can be used sustainably and profitably in corporate showrooms. They focus attention, provide orientation, set accents or make spatial relationships understandable. They support content – they do not replace it.
Advantages of hologram technology:
- Wow Moments
- longer dwell time
- better product comprehensibility
- more emotional brand perception
- faster comprehension of complex content
These technologies are particularly powerful where spatial representation leads to genuine understanding, such as in the case of internal structures, processes or complex systems. But even entertaining wow effects can have a lasting impact if they are embedded in a clear dramaturgy. A successful corporate showroom therefore uses hologram-like representations in a targeted and measured way – as part of an overall concept comprising content, interaction and interior design. In this way, technology becomes a means of communication, with the product always remaining the focus.
Using hologram effects profitably – with Garamantis’ expertise
Are you curious about how hologram-like technologies can spectacularly showcase your brand and products? Then Garamantis is the right place for you. As a full-service provider for interactive exhibitions and showrooms, we plan experiential worlds for your company and ensure perfect implementation.