illy, the well-known Italian coffee brand, dedicated to visual arts, has launched a revised platform of its digital network, illysustainArt.org, which is dedicated to artists and curators, who live and work in emerging and developing economies. The online program, which was first presented in 2008, offers representatives of the modern art scene from the countries, which provide little opportunities for those who want to share their creativity with the world, to join the global community for better communication and getting a feedback on their works.
Author: Anna Rudenko
Stabburet, the Norwegian food business is launching a new range of frozen pasta meals under its popular Originale brand name. The launch extends the existing Originale range of frozen pizzas and includes Originale Tagliatelle Bolognese, Originale Tagliatelle Prosciutto, Originale Penne Mozzarella and Originale Penne Pikante. International design agency LFH has created the category-busting design to encourage a new generation into the ready meal market.
Citroën is offering auto fans an opportunity to experience the ride in a fun and entertaining way. The brand puts drivers behind the wheel of its C4 model in the digital movie and offers them to choose how the plot will develop. The online-project entitled ‘Positive Power’ is more like an action movie, an “interactive voyage of mystery, suspense and excitement,” where you are the protagonist.
The Nike brand, which is well-known for producing high-quality professional sport gear and apparel for everyday athletes, has presented two adverts celebrating free moves. The two videos are dedicated to people whose motto is ‘Life is motion,’ and they never miss an opportunity to prove it. The videos, masterminded by Nike’s long-standing partner Wieden+Kennedy Portland agency, features dozens of people, who are demonstrating their very best moves in multiple sport disciplines or everyday life.
The Lee brand is modelling itself after another celebrated jeanswear manufacturer, Levi’s, by introducing its own solution on how to be eco-conscious. While Levi’s is doing a bigger job by launching its Water<Less clothing and asking public to develop their own ideas on how to make drying more eco-friendly, Lee is trying contributing to the cause by encouraging its fans to re-use—packaging, not pants. The brand offers its consumers the ‘Never Wasted’ shopping bag, which can ‘reincarnate’ into a number of nice things after being used as a container for taking the purchases home.