For Millennials, the experience and the product are one in the same and the lines between the digital and physical experience are less defined, if at all.
Source: Five Design Principles to Attract the Millennial Traveller – Tnooz
For Millennials, the experience and the product are one in the same and the lines between the digital and physical experience are less defined, if at all.
Source: Five Design Principles to Attract the Millennial Traveller – Tnooz
Along with the wonder goals, penalties, sending offs and pitch invasions, some of football’s most memorable moments have come in the form of the undershirt celebration: hastily scrawled or ironed-on messages expressing political views or religious beliefs, which players would lift their shirt to reveal after scoring a goal.
Source: I Belong to Jesus: a Loving Homage to the Undershirt Goal Celebration – Creative Review
It turns out the consultants were right. Now, I’ve not only embraced Drucker’s mantra of culture-eats-strategy, but I’ve upgraded to Bill Aulet’s religion of “culture eats strategy for breakfast, technology for lunch, and products for dinner, and soon thereafter everything else too!â€
Source: 3 Reasons Why Culture is Your Most Important Asset – UNREASONABLE
Playing with an origami canoe made of paper one day, Ghent-based designer Otto Van De Steene wondered whether a similar folding method translated to a sturdy, seaworthy material could help him get out onto the water more often. The result is ‘ONAK,’ a portable canoe that folds down to the size of a suitcase.
Source: Unfold Your Getaway: Canoe for City Dwellers Packs Down to a Suitcase | Urbanist
Using public street fixtures as printing elements, the artist collective behind Berlin-based Raubdruckerin (pirate printer) produces shirts and bags imprinted with manhole covers, vents, and utility grates. The overlooked geometric patterns and typographic forms of urban signage make surprisingly nifty graphics for shirts. The collective applies ink directly to the streets and prints on-site in locations like Amsterdam, Lisbon, and Paris and then sell their creations through an online shop.
Source: Pirate Printers: Shirts and Totes Printed Directly on Urban Utility Covers | Colossal