If you've shopped wedding tents for more than ten minutes, you've hit the big-three comparison: marquee vs. sailcloth vs. frame tent. The names sometimes overlap, the photos look similar at first glance, and the price ranges are wildly different. After installing all three across the Lower Mainland for years, here's the honest take — what each one is, where it shines, where it falls apart, and which to pick for your specific wedding.
01The three styles in one paragraph each
Frame marquee — what we rent. Aluminum frame holds the roof from above, no centre poles inside. The roof is white or off-white vinyl, peaked but not steeply, with eaves that sheet water cleanly to the perimeter. Sets up on grass, asphalt, or sub-floor. The Swiss Army knife of wedding tents. Most of our tent inventory is this style — the 20×40 marquee is our flagship size.
Sailcloth tent — wooden centre poles, sheer canvas roof. The "Pinterest tent" you've seen in coastal-wedding shoots. Beautiful at golden hour and gorgeous at night because the sheer fabric glows from interior lighting. Heavier, slower setup, needs grass or sand for stake-out. Sells out 12+ months ahead in BC.
Frame tent (industrial) — same engineering principle as a frame marquee but utilitarian. Flat-ish roof, no peaks, often grey or natural-toned vinyl, designed for festivals and corporate events. Goes anywhere — concrete, decks, gravel — and is the only one of the three that genuinely doesn't need stakes when properly ballasted.
If you only read this section
- Frame marquee is the right choice for 80% of BC weddings — flexible, weather-resilient, photographs well.
- Sailcloth is the right choice if your wedding is July or August, on grass, with a generous budget — and you're willing to plan around its weather sensitivity.
- Industrial frame is for non-grass venues — patios, parking lots, decks, festivals — and corporate events where the look matters less than the logistics.
- Price increases roughly 1× → 2× → 3.5× from frame marquee to industrial frame to sailcloth.
01bPole tents and pop-up canopies — what about these?
The three-style frame is the most common comparison, but two more tent types come up in BC searches:
- Pole tents are the close cousin of sailcloth — vinyl roof tensioned by interior centre poles, exterior guy-line stake-outs. Common at U.S. weddings, less so in BC. They photograph well but have the same rain weakness as sailcloth (low spots above centre poles), and they need 8–10 ft of clearance beyond the tent footprint for stake-outs. Most Lower Mainland backyards and parks don't have that buffer.
- Pop-up canopies are the small-format outlier — 10×10 to 10×20 self-contained frame tents. Not a "wedding tent" for a full reception, but the right tool for ceremony altars, food stations, or rain shelter at very small events. For weddings under 30 guests on a tight backyard or a deck-only space, see our popup-on-deck guide.
02Look-and-feel — which photographs best
Photographers will tell you that all three photograph beautifully under the right conditions. The differences are subtler:
- Frame marquee photographs cleanest in daylight, with crisp peaked lines and a consistent white roof. At night, it's a "blank canvas" — whatever lighting you install becomes the look. String lights along the rafters create a warm glow; uplighting the roof lines makes it dramatic.
- Sailcloth is the night photography winner. The sheer canvas absorbs and diffuses interior lighting in a way that vinyl roofs can't, producing the warm-glow look you've seen in every "tented wedding" feature in coastal magazines. The trade-off: in flat overcast light (so, a typical BC October Saturday), it looks softer and less crisp than a marquee.
- Industrial frame photographs functional. Best in styled corporate settings or festival contexts where the tent isn't the centerpiece. Less flattering for a wedding focal point.
03Wind, rain, and BC-climate behavior
This is where the three styles diverge the most, and where BC-specific advice matters most.
- Frame marquee handles BC weather best of the three. Vinyl roof sheets water cleanly. Sidewalls seal flush at the eave. Wind ratings (with proper anchoring) of 50 km/h sustained / 70 km/h gusts.
- Sailcloth is the worst rain performer. Canvas absorbs water, gains weight, and the centre-pole peaks create small low spots where water can pool and seep. We've installed sailcloth in light rain successfully, but it's a date-and-forecast-dependent decision. We don't recommend sailcloth between October and May in BC.
- Industrial frame is the best wind performer because the flat roof has the smallest sail area. Common at coastal and bluff-top corporate events for that reason. Rain sheets off but accumulates faster on the flatter roof — you'll occasionally see staff push pooled water off with a pole.
If your wedding is between Labour Day and Victoria Day (the BC shoulder/wet season), frame marquee is the only one of the three we'd quote without an explicit weather contingency conversation. See our BC rain tent guide for the full setup playbook.
"Sailcloth is the prettiest tent in the world on a sunny July evening. We don't rent them — and that's not because they're bad. It's because nine months of the year, BC weather makes them the wrong tool. Match the tent to the season." — Devon, Forever Party Rentals
04Setup time, surface needs, and staking
Setup logistics are the hidden tax on tent style. They show up as crew labour and delivery surcharges in your quote, and they decide whether the tent can even go up at your venue.
- Frame marquee — installs in 2–4 hours for sizes up to 20×60. Sets up on grass with stakes or hard surface with weighted ballast. Most flexible of the three.
- Sailcloth — 4–7 hours for similar sizes. Requires grass for centre-pole stake-out (or, occasionally, large sand-bag arrays for sand venues). Cannot go on hard surfaces. Crew of 4 minimum.
- Industrial frame — 2–5 hours. The only style that genuinely doesn't need ground anchoring when ballasted. The right answer for parking-lot and rooftop installs.
For backyard weddings on irregular grass with slope, marquee is almost always the right pick — see our backyard wedding tent playbook for measurement specifics.
05Price tiers compared
Apples-to-apples (same footprint, same install zone, same general inclusions), here are the rough multiples. Use these as ratios, not absolute prices — your real numbers depend on size, season, and add-ons.
| Style | Tent only | With sidewalls | Vendors in BC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frame marquee (20×60) | $2,200 | $2,780 | Many — most rental companies stock these |
| Industrial frame (30×60) | $3,800 | $4,500 | Several — common at festivals |
| Sailcloth (44×43) | $7,500 | $8,900 | Rare — 2–3 vendors, often booked 12+ months out |
The price multiple from frame marquee to sailcloth is roughly 3.5×. Some couples decide that's worth it for the look; most decide it's not. If sailcloth is the must-have, book by January for that year's summer dates.
Wedding Package Frame marquee + everything inside it Our 100-guest package: 20×60 marquee, sidewalls, chairs, tables, dance floor, lights — installed and ready for your caterer.06Which to pick for 50, 100, 150 guests
Cut to the chase. Here's the frame marquee size we'd quote for each guest count, and when we'd flex to a different style:
- 50 guests — 20×30 marquee for seated reception, 20×40 if you want a real dance floor. Sailcloth 32×32 if you're committed to that look and the date is July/August.
- 100 guests — 20×60 marquee for full reception with dance. Industrial frame 30×60 only if your venue is concrete or pavers.
- 150 guests — 30×60 frame marquee or 40×80 large-format. Sailcloth at this size is a 44×83 ($12,000+ tent only) and rarely the right call unless budget is non-issue.
07Hybrid setups — clear tops, dormers, cathedral windows
You don't have to pick one style and live with it. Three hybrid options worth knowing about:
- Clear-top marquees — frame marquee with a transparent vinyl roof. Daylight comes through, stars come through at night, but the structure is the same as a regular marquee. About 30–50% premium over a standard marquee. Worth a separate read in our clear top tent guide.
- Dormers and cathedral windows in sidewalls — solid sidewalls with framed clear panels. Keeps the rain out, lets the view in. Premium of about 2× plain white walls, but transformative at ocean-view venues.
- Marquee + sailcloth feature element — main reception under a marquee, smaller "ceremony" sailcloth structure for photos and the vow exchange. Splits the budget and uses each tent for what it's best at.
08Next steps
If you're trying to choose between styles, the clearest decision tree is: what month is the wedding, what surface is the venue, and what's the photography priority? Send us those three answers and we'll tell you in one email which style fits, and which to skip.
Style Recommendation Tell us your date and venue — we'll pick the tent style Free, no-obligation. Two-paragraph email back within a business day with the style we'd recommend and why.FAQFrequently asked questions
What's the difference between a marquee and a frame tent?
Are sailcloth tents waterproof?
Which wedding tent style is cheapest?
Do marquee tents need stakes?
What's the best wedding tent for BC weather?
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