Wedding Venue Booking Website Template
Gather is a full-width immersive landing page built for loft and industrial venue catering directors. It guides visitors through a scrolling timeline, from empty warehouse to fully realised event, and drives bookings through a "Reserve a Tasting" form that opens with the venue, not the menu. The Soft Mist palette and parallax storytelling make it feel like arriving early to a beautiful, unhurried space.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Gather is a single-page, full-width landing page for catering directors who work in loft and industrial venues. It uses a Timeline Progression scroll structure to walk visitors through the full event lifecycle, from raw empty space to plated courses mid-evening. The design is warm, editorial, and purpose-built to earn a booking before the form ever appears.
Who this template is for
This template is built for catering professionals whose work is inseparable from the spaces they serve. If your clients choose venues before they choose food, this page speaks their language.
- Catering directors specialising in converted warehouses, rooftop lofts, and old factory venues
- Independent caterers pitching event planners, creative directors, and couples who care about atmosphere
- Food and event professionals who need a booking-focused page that leads with space and story, not just a menu list
What problem this template solves
Most catering landing pages look like restaurant menus. They list dishes, show food photography, and bury the contact form at the bottom. That approach loses the clients who chose an industrial venue specifically because they want an experience, not just a meal.
- There is no narrative arc that shows how the caterer inhabits the space before anyone else arrives
- Generic catering pages cannot communicate the relationship between architecture and plating
- Standard contact forms ask about guest count first, when the venue itself should drive the conversation
What you get with this template
You get a complete, ready-to-customise landing page that moves visitors through a deliberate visual story. Every section is ordered and purposeful, so nothing feels random or decorative.
- A five-section scrolling timeline with parallax drift transitions, from empty venue through to a live event
- A dual conversion path: a primary "Reserve a Tasting" booking form and a secondary "Download Our Seasonal Lookbook" email capture
- A full Soft Mist visual identity system with defined colours, type hierarchy, and accent usage already applied throughout
Feature list
This section highlights the core capabilities built into the Gather template.
Full-Viewport Seasonal Header
The header fills the entire screen with a late-autumn golden hour warehouse image. A single serif headline rises from the bottom: "Menus shaped by the room they're served in." The hero photograph is designed to rotate quarterly, so the page always feels current and alive rather than static.
Timeline Progression Scroll Structure
Five sequential sections guide the visitor through the event lifecycle. The journey moves from empty venue, to consultation mood boards, to ingredient sourcing, to kitchen production, to the fully realised evening. Parallax drift transitions connect each stage so the scroll feels organic, not mechanical.
Venue-First Booking Form
The "Reserve a Tasting" form opens with venue name or address, because the space shapes the menu. It then collects event date, guest count, and a single open field: "Tell us about the room." This sequence signals immediately that this caterer thinks in spaces.
Floating and Anchored Call-to-Action
The primary call-to-action appears first as a floating pill after the third scroll section. It then anchors permanently at the final section. This staged placement earns the click rather than rushing it.
Seasonal Lookbook Email Capture
A secondary conversion path offers planners a downloadable seasonal lookbook. It captures email address and event quarter, reaching visitors who are still in the research phase without losing them to a single hard ask.
Soft Mist Colour and Typography System
The palette uses warm fog, washed linen, charred rosemary, and pressed olive as the single living accent. Olive appears only on interactive elements: buttons, photography borders, and hover states. The result is a restrained, editorial visual identity that feels tasted rather than designed.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Full-Viewport Header | Sets tone with seasonal warehouse imagery and the opening headline |
| Empty Venue Stage | Establishes the raw, unset space as the starting point of every event |
| Consultation Mood Boards | Shows the planning process pinned to corrugated walls |
| Ingredient Sourcing | Tight photography of dawn-market produce selection |
| Kitchen Production | Portable stations and open flame cooking inside the venue itself |
| Fully Realised Event | Guests mid-conversation, plates half-finished, candles low |
| Reserve a Tasting Form | Venue-first booking form anchored at the page's close |
Design & branding system
The Gather template follows an Organic Flow theme expressed through the Soft Mist colour system. Every colour decision has a defined role, and nothing competes with the photography.
- Warm fog (#E8E4DF) and washed linen (#F5F2ED) alternate as section backgrounds, keeping the page airy and readable
- Charred rosemary (#4A4A42) carries all body text and headings, giving the page a grounded, earthy tone
- Pressed olive (#8B9A6B) appears only on buttons, garnish photography borders, and hover states, acting as the sole signal of interactivity
Mobile & speed optimization
The template is built with a full-width immersive layout that scales naturally across screen sizes. The visual hierarchy stays intact whether a visitor is on a desktop or a phone.
- Parallax drift and section transitions are designed to feel smooth without requiring complex interactions
- The floating call-to-action pill adapts to smaller viewports so it remains accessible without obstructing content
- Typography scales maintain the hand-set serif editorial feel across all device widths
How this template helps you convert
Gather converts by earning trust before asking for anything. The scroll structure does the persuasion work so the form feels like a natural next step.
- The timeline scroll shows the full event process in sequence, so visitors understand the caterer's depth of involvement before a single word of sales copy is read
- The floating call-to-action appears only after the third section, timing the ask to the moment the visitor is already invested in the story
- The venue-first form field reframes the booking conversation around the client's space, making the caterer feel like a collaborator rather than a vendor
Other information about this template
The Gather template sits within the Wedding and Events category, under Wedding Venue Services, and is specifically designed for the loft and industrial venue catering niche. It is a strong fit for any catering professional who needs a landing page that communicates creative and spatial intelligence alongside food quality.
- The template is customisable: swap the seasonal header image each quarter to keep the page feeling current
- The lookbook capture form supports a two-stage nurture approach, reaching planners at both the decision and research stages
- The page structure and creative direction are aligned specifically to industrial and loft venue contexts, including rooftop lofts, converted warehouses, and repurposed factory spaces




Theme
Organic Flow
Creative direction
Timeline Progression
Color system
Soft Mist
Style
Full-Width Immersive
Direction
Booking/Scheduling
Page Sections
Full-viewport Seasonal Header
Timeline Progression Scroll Structure
Venue-first Booking Form
Staged Call-to-action Placement
Seasonal Lookbook Email Capture
Soft Mist Colour and Type System
Related questions
Can I update the header photograph each season?
Does the booking form work if a client has not yet confirmed their venue?
Is this template suitable for smaller catering operations?
What is the secondary conversion path designed for?
Can I adapt this template if my work is not exclusively in industrial venues?