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Park Ji Hoon is bringing his Asia Fancon to Singapore on 18 July 2026, and WinkDeep fans are already planning their fan support kits. Fancons are a different format from arena concerts — more intimate, more interactive — and your print choices should reflect that. Hand fans and placards remain essential; the window to order is now.
Park Ji Hoon rose to prominence through Produce 101 Season 2 and has built a devoted solo fanbase since his debut. His fancons in Asia consistently sell out quickly, and the Singapore WinkDeep community is one of the most organised in Southeast Asia. A fancon format — typically held in a theatre or mid-size venue — means smaller capacity than an arena concert, which actually makes fan support items more visible and more meaningful to the artist.
The 18 July date gives you roughly eight weeks from today. That is a comfortable production window if you start now, but fan club group buys have their own internal timeline — artwork approval, payment collection, and order submission all eat into that window faster than most fan clubs anticipate the first time they run one. Starting the conversation with your fan club today, not next month, is the right move.
What Works Best at a Fancon Format
Hand fans translate directly from arena concerts to fancon settings, and arguably they are even more effective in a smaller venue. With less distance between fan and artist, a well-designed hand fan — especially one with a message or artwork that the artist can appreciate up close — lands differently than it does in a 10,000-seat stadium. For Park Ji Hoon fancons, designs often incorporate his signature “wink” motif, member colour references, or messages in Korean that he can read during the show. Keep the artwork clean and readable at arm’s length — that is the effective display distance in a theatre setting.
Placards at fancons are typically A5 or A4 — smaller than arena concert placards — because the sight distances are shorter and there is no need to project a message across 15,000 seats. A clean, typographically strong design with his name in Korean, a “Singapore WinkDeep” message, or a personal message from a fan club performs well in this format. Glossy lamination on a placard helps it catch the stage lighting cleanly.
Button badges are especially popular at fancons, where the queue culture is intense and the camaraderie among fans is high. A thoughtfully designed badge distributed at the venue entrance tells other fans that there is an organised Singapore WinkDeep community, creates connection, and gives everyone a physical keepsake from the day. Custom stickers in fancon-appropriate designs — smaller, more personal than concert slogan items — round out a well-produced fan support kit.
Running a Fancon Group Buy in Singapore
Fancon group buys tend to have lower total quantities than arena concert orders because the venue capacity is smaller. That is fine — most Singapore print suppliers have accessible minimum quantities for items like hand fans (often from 50 pieces), badges (from 50 to 100 pieces), and stickers (from 50 to 100 pieces). At smaller quantities you pay a higher per-unit cost, so it is worth consolidating as many items as possible into a single order to maximise the quantity discount.
Fancon distribution logistics are simpler than arena concert logistics because the venue is smaller and the queue is more contained. A table near the venue entrance with a fan club member handling distribution works cleanly for 100 to 200 people. If your fan club is expecting more than that, stagger distribution into two or three collection windows rather than trying to process everyone at once.
Artwork Specifications
Fancon print items often incorporate more personal, detailed artwork than concert placards because the viewing distance is shorter. For hand fans and badges, 300 DPI at final print size is the minimum. Colour mode must be CMYK for consistent results — not RGB. If your design features photography, confirm the source resolution at the actual print dimensions before finalising the artwork. Fans at a fancon will hold your badge up close; at that distance, a low-resolution source photo is immediately visible.
Order Deadline for 18 July Fancon
Place your print order by 4 July for standard production with a comfortable delivery buffer. If you are still collecting pre-orders from fan club members in late June, express turnaround options can cover you up to around 11 July — but there is no room for artwork revisions at that point. Lock designs and submit early; fancon group buys that start the print process in June finish with zero last-minute stress.
ExpressPrint for Fancon Print
At ExpressPrint, hand fans, placards, button badges, and die-cut stickers are all priced online with instant quotes. Small fancon quantities are available with no minimum that makes smaller fan clubs feel priced out. Island-wide tracked delivery keeps your group buy logistics simple.
Park Ji Hoon fancons are known for the close energy between artist and audience — the kind of show where fan support items genuinely reach the stage rather than disappearing into a sea of 15,000 people. Getting your print sorted now means you arrive at the venue on 18 July focused entirely on the experience.
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