Reason #491 why I love the Internet: availability of clips from the Seinfeld coffee-table book episode.
(The subject of said episode was a topic of lunch discussion today. Now this is research, people.)
Procter & Gamble Co., General Mills Inc., Hostess Brands Inc. and PepsiCo Inc. are pulling old package designs out of their archives for brands like Tide, Cheerios and Doritos and bringing them back to store shelves. Smaller companies and start-ups are using fonts, colors or designs that evoke the past on their labels.
The move is a U-turn from labels cluttered with specific claims like “easy pour spout” or “better tasting” to packaging that plays on the emotions. Over time, labels have gotten busier because computers allowed for complex designs and marketers wanted products to stand out on crowded shelves.
“We got to the point where you couldn’t add one more bling thing to a package,” says Christine Mau, director of design at Kimberly-Clark Corp., the maker of Kleenex and Huggies, among other items.
The retro movement is driven, in part, by consumer-goods companies feeling pressure from retailers’ private-label products, which are generally less expensive.
Manufacturers also say they are hoping to benefit from consumers’ generally sunny impression of the past and stand out in a sea of modern, glossy packages.
Full story: New! Improved! (and Very Old) - WSJ.com
Tubeless toilet paper — America’s next great product?
The 17 billion toilet paper tubes produced annually in the USA account for 160 million pounds of trash, according to Kimberly-Clark estimates, and could stretch more than a million miles placed end-to-end. That’s from here to the moon and back — twice. Most consumers toss, rather than recycle, used tubes, says Doug Daniels, brand manager at Kimberly-Clark. “We found a way to bring innovation to a category as mature as bath tissue,” he says. (Full story: Kimberly-Clark rolls out tube-free Scott toilet paper - USATODAY.com)
(spotted on Twitter, via Pauline Hammerbeck @pHammerbeck and Bruce Horovitz @brucehorovitz)
Meanwhile: What do some folks do with those ubiquitous tubes? Unconsumptioneers found a couple of examples.
Intriguing…
Make your own Damien Hirst!!!
iartistlondon has kits that give you everything you need to make your own masterpieces. So many to choose from, Emin, Banksy, even Mark Quinn’s bloody portrait! I would love the Quinn, but I know that I would accidentally melt it by knocking it out of my freezer when I was grabbing some ice cream. Not a mess I would like to clean up.
From iartistlondon’s Web site:
CONTENTS: PLASTIC HUMAN SIZE SKULL, CRYSTAL BEADS (8,601 PIECES), GLUE, PAINTBRUSH, TWEEZERS, SILVER PAINT, INSTRUCTIONS.
[Patience not included.]
Reason #491 why I love the Internet: availability of clips from the Seinfeld coffee-table book episode.
(The subject of said episode was a topic of lunch discussion today. Now this is research, people.)
Marcel Duchamp would have a field day with this item …
Via murketing:
“To keep yourself entertained during bathroom breaks, The Weee urinal mat also keeps bathrooms cleaner by encouraging good aim.” Part of the comprehensive World Cup 2010 on Cool Hunting