Bpay : Almost too Easy

Une campagne imaginée et réalisée par l’agence BMF Sydney, pour les banques australiennes Bpay. Une baseline très simple “Almost too easy” et des visuels percutants de la part du photographe Andreas Bommert. A découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

Dolce Gusto Design

Nouvelle étape pour Nescafé Dolce Gusto avec la lancement de leur nouvelle machine, au design très réussi et moderne. Un mélange d’innovation produit et d’un aspect futuriste. La commercialisation est prévue pour novembre 2009, avec des prix allant de 149 à 179 euros.



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Bonus : vidéo sponsorisée de présentation de la machine.

Previously on Fubiz

Confessions of a new business executive

LONDON – A former new business executive lifts the lid on the ‘tears, tantrums and anarchy’ within a new business agency.

Retro Hair Revivals – The Hottest Hairstyle for Men Has Big Hair Reigning Supreme (GALLERY)

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Animal Photobombing – Cameras Capture Confused Pets Hamming it up (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Photobombing has been taken to a new level with the advent of amusing animal photobombing. Cameras happen to catch curious creatures unaware of what is going down with hilarious results.

Sometimes a nosy…

Never say die!

Illustration in Indian Advertising

George Supreeth runs  Pencilsauce, and Bite Lightning, an illustration studio and an Illustrator representation unit in Bangalore. He was among the new breed of computer literate visualisers who wiped out advertising studio artists in the mid 90s. He quit the Ad industry in 2000 and has been sulking around its periphery ever since. He teaches at the local art college and he loves to draw.

There’s something about the Punjabi  word ‘Jugaad’, that doesn’t translate too well into English, but it is a concept that is intrinsic to Indian advertising illustrations. There is something about our advertising that utterly and completely ignores illustration as a visual device. Perhaps social scientists and psychologists may say that it is the inherent Indian trait to deify that makes the humanizing art of photography a more relevant option. That and the fact that Photoshop changed everything in the early 90’s.

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Illustration in Early Indian Advertising
Illustrations actually had a pretty good run in early Indian advertising. The fact that it lent itself to the coarse ‘Indian’ art paper (as opposed to foreign art), and reproduced well also helped.  Most illustrators were studio artists, who created stunning art using alabaster paper and poster colours. In fact until a few years ago, the model for most applied arts courses were actually illustration courses, posing as applied arts for advertising.

Since basic drawing skills were the very foundation of institutes like the JJ school of Art, almost every Indian art director in an advertising agency could draw. This led to quite a staggering range of illustrative styles in Indian advertising of the 70s and the 80s.

BSA SLR Kapil Dev

BSA SLR Kapil Dev

Boroline

Boroline

Remember Kapil and his BSA? Even then I thought that the artist’s lines were impeccable, and I loved the frame where he reaches the airport. This illustrator really nailed each action shot. and then there was the alien’s time machine in the Boroline ad. Another nicely done comic! Also remember the Nutrine rabbit? To be honest I always hated that guy, but comics, characters and even just ornamental styles were rampant in advertising of the 70’s and the 80s.

Visit Vishal Patel’s site for some examples of retro comic book styles.

In the early 90’s when Photoshop hit the agency circuit, and the possibilities of Photo manipulation dawned on the agency creative, the holy grail of advertising photography had been breached. Up until then, Photography was entirely the domain of the Photographer. From the shoot planning right up until the transparencies were handed over, the photographer ruled the whole mysterious process. With Photoshop however, you didn’t have to run back to the processing lab every time you needed a new overlay or colourisation. Even better you could create complete comps of the layout. That one software did everything. It wiped out photo strippers, colourisation artists, and cut and paste experts. A side effect of the whole process was that illustration got left out in the cold.
When applied arts and advertising students discovered digital photo manipulation, entire college projects were comped using the software. The idea of storytelling or using images to tell stories soon became prevalent, with the images informing the story. With illustration, the idea came first and then you briefed the illustrator on what you wanted. With photo manipulation, you picked an image with potential, and pick an angle to base your story on. As a result, an entire industry forgot how to draw, and with it how to use Illustration as a visual medium.

The Whole Point of Illustration
While some illustration enthusiasts argue VS photography in general, the point of illustration is something else entirely. Illustrations use the innate ability of human beings to anthropomorphise. Which is why Calvin and Hobbes are so endearing, and comic books feel like motion pictures when you remember them afterwards. Illustrations reach some areas of our mind that photographs just cannot. Unlike a photograph of a person, an illustrated character can be designed without a trace of gender, race or age. It need not even be of the same species, but it still has the power to resonate with basic human emotions.

A well designed illustration can present the viewer with a completely new experience. Take the Mother’s pride ads illustrated by the talented  Sameer Kulavoor. Using a collage styled illustration completely and pleasantly disrupts the viewers expectation of the visual. Here, the skill of the illustrator is to keep the illustration within the realms of believability even when he’s exaggerating the characters and the environments. Disruption in this case directly lends itself to brand recall or the ability of the viewer to recall the brand due to him associating it with the illustration. The entire point of cleverness in advertising is to create spikes in people’s normative experiences. Little anchors that they will associate with the advertised product or service. These anchors are reactivated at the point of purchase through repeating elements from the original message or advertisment.

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The Illustration Scene Today
While Illustration has been making a major resurgence the world over, in India we are only just begining to rediscover it’s potential. Artist’s like Kulavoor are among the few talented people who are creating an interest in this field. In an area which is cluttered with photographic imagery, Illustration can provide the key to differentiation. However our skills in this area have atrophied. During the period when advertising and publishing forgot illustration, potential and budding illustrators turned to a new area for sustenance. Computer graphics!
You could argue that computer graphics is just the tool and not the field. But in the time that illustration was no longer required for storytelling, artists turned their attention to graphical representation. Most Indian artists are extremely skilled at graphical representations, even at hyper realistic detail. This is not the same as Illustration. The word Illustrate itself means to educate by example or to enlighten. An illustrator needs to understand narrative, continuity and characterization to illustrate an idea. Graphical representations on the other hand are just maps. An objective device devoid of interactive potential.
The potential to brand through illustration will eventually dawn on the Indian advertising creative. With the number of advertising media increasing exponentially each year and as differentiation through imagery becomes increasingly difficult, Illustration offers a way to create unique visual experiences and newer ways to tap into consumers’ minds.

Pencil Sauce at work

Pencil Sauce at work

Illustration for Jungle Camp, by Pencil Sauce

Illustration for Jungle Camp, by Pencil Sauce

Clay Model character, by Pencil Sauce

Clay Model character, by Pencil Sauce

A photo-realistic rendtion of a Wine Bottle. Illustration by Pencil Sauce.

A photo-realistic rendtion of a Wine Bottle. Illustration by Pencil Sauce.

There’s something about the Punjabi  word ‘Jugaad’, that doesn’t translate too well into English, but it is a concept that is intrinsic to Indian advertising illustrations. There is something about our advertising that utterly and completely ignores illustration as a visual device. Perhaps social scientists and psychologists may say that it is the inherent Indian trait to deify that makes the humanizing art of photography a more relevant option. That and the fact that Photoshop changed everything in the early 90’s.

Vintage Gadgettoos – Retro Tech Tattoo Revisitations Inked on Skin (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) People usually get a tattoo of an image on their body that represents a strong feeling or a favorite subject. However, the recent number of individuals choosing to display seemingly mindless and rather…

Haute Street Hustlers – Designer-Clad Hanne Gaby Odiele in Dazed and Confused (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The epically titled ‘In A Haphazard Explosion of Colour, Anti-Fashion Finds Its Style on the corner of 3rd Street Avenue C’ is an editorial starring model Hanne Gaby Odiele in Dazed and Confused magazine.…

Bloomberg’s Radical Plan for BusinessWeek: Better Editorial



NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — The new owners have a plan that's basic enough to seem radical these days: It will invest in the editorial product at BusinessWeek, which will probably be renamed Bloomberg BusinessWeek, in the expectation that readers, and advertisers in turn, will follow.

Peta swine flu ad slammed by ASA

LONDON – A poster ad for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) suggesting that swine flu could be transmitted by eating meat, has been pulled by the Advertising Standards Authority.

Regulator takes ‘non-scientific’ Actimel ad off-air

LONDON – The Advertising Standards Authority has banned a TV ad for Actimel after a viewer complained about the ad’s “scientific” claims.

ASA orders 11pm watershed for horror film trailer

LONDON – The Advertising Standards Authority has ordered a later timing restriction for three TV ads promoting the cinema release of The Last House On The Left after 19 people complained.

Bloomberg Agrees to Buy BusinessWeek From McGraw Hill



NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Bloomberg sealed an agreement today to buy BusinessWeek from McGraw-Hill, ending a three-month sale process with an outcome that many observers had argued would be the best for the magazine.

E.N.P.A.: Spray

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“Help us fight the effects of cosmetic testing.”

Advertising Agency: Lowe Pirella Fronzoni, Milan, Italy
Creative Directors: Umberto Casagrande, Mauro Manieri
Art Director: Ferdinando Galletti
Copywriter: Gabriele Di Donato
Photographer: LSD.eu
Published: September 2009

What’s Behind Viral Success? Great Meme Marketing


Memes are the ideas, symbols or practices that naturally spread throughout a culture. The new opportunity marketers have now is to apply the study of memes (or, memetics) to how they create messages for their clients, and how they introduce these to consumers.

Viagra’s Digital-Advertising Account Goes to Rapp


After giving its creative account to Publicis Groupe's McGarryBowen, Pfizer's Viagra brand has awarded digital and CRM duties to Omnicom Group's Rapp.

Coty Expands Local Media Agency Reviews Into $300M Global Search

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — Coty is expanding a series of local reviews for media buying in the U.S. and U.K. into a global pitch across 90 countries for its nearly $300 million media account.

Al Jefferson: NBA Star and Unpaid Endorser for Subway

In his attempt to reduce stress on his knee, the 6-foot-11 basketball star Al Jefferson dropped 31 pounds in seven months — cutting his weight to 262 lbs. — and he's telling everyone who asks that he did it by eating at Subway.

CBS Narrowly Beats Fox for First in Key Demo on Monday



Monday's somewhat surprising storylines so far this season have seemingly settled into patterns. CBS won overall with a 4.1/10 rating and share in the ad-centric adult 18-49 demographic.

RSPCA: Clean up, Vacuum, Mop

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“Show us some love. We’ll return the favor. RSPCA”

Advertising Agency: George Patterson Y&R, Brisbane, Australia
Creative Directors: David Joubert, Piet Human
Art Director: Adam Gower
Copywriter: Andrew Thompson
Retouch: John Shard
Account manager: Jess Hughes