Proposed Cigarette Product Warning Labels in the USA


 

 

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has released some proposed graphic health warnings that are due to appear on cigarette packets by the end of June 2011.

Some of them are quite hard-hitting, but the most interesting thing is the size of the image on the package. The tobacco companies won’t like the fact their brand will be situated near these – in fact I wonder how tempted they might be just to sell unbranded cigarettes instead?

One of the images is more positive (below) – which do you think would be most effective?

 

 

 

Amazon Frustration-Free Packaging FAQs

What a great idea from Amazon.com:

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The Frustration-Free Package (on the left) is recyclable and comes without excess packaging materials such as hard plastic clamshell casings, plastic bindings, and wire ties. It’s designed to be opened without the use of a box cutter or knife and will protect your product just as well as traditional packaging (on the right). Products with Frustration-Free Packaging can frequently be shipped in their own boxes, without an additional shipping box.”

(Sniff. I wish I’d had one of those boats as a kid. We were lucky to get a tangerine for Christmas…)

I hate packaging

This clearly isn’t me in the video, but I feel the guy’s pain. I recently had to open a piece of electrical gadgetry for an Amazon review and nearly sliced my fingers off in the process. It’s those stupid plastic containers – great for shop displays but impossible to get in to without creating razor-sharp pieces.

Let’s bring paper back, shall we? At least you can recycle it…

Apple Unboxing Gone Terribly Wrong from UnBoxedLunch on Vimeo.

The positive effects of big boxes

Noisy Decent Graphics has some photos of some particularly wasteful packaging from Apple. Pop over and take a look. Then come back here. We can wait.

I’ve had similar experiences recently, especially from Amazon – big boxes for small things. Luckily I’ve been in for the deliveries but on other occasions I’d need to wait until the weekend to collect from the village post office. So I’m with Ben on this – it’s wasteful.
It’s doubly ironic in this case because Apple recently trimmed all their packaging. iLife, iWork, Leopard etc all now come in minimalist packaging whereas they once came in big boxes for no reason.

Well actually there was a reason. Ben at NDG points out that people still like something tangible, even for ‘virtual’ purchases like a service or online membership. Back in the early 90s I was talking to a print rep who was marvelling that my Mac IIFX and monitor only took up an entire desk. Tthe scanner, which was massive, had a table to itself as did the laser printer. But it was still an improvement on what it all replaced. He reminisced about early typesetting computers: “I remember when computers filled the room” he said. He then went on to tell us about when his company bought a new computer that came in a box that could fit under a (big) table. “It was bloody heavy” he said. One day something went wrong with it so an enterprising individual opened up the case and they discovered a big lump of concrete screwed in to the casing.

When they rang the manufacturer they said “we do that because we found that when people have just spent fifty grand on something, they want it to be f***ing heavy”…

I think there’s a lesson in there for everybody. Big boxes might be environmentally unsustainable, but at least you feel you’ve got your money’s worth.

iPhone 3G to be shipped in eco-friendly packaging: spuds

The new iPhone 3G will ship in a paper tray made that has a carbon footprint a tenth the size of a plastic tray, according to its manufacturer.

The paper tray, manufactured by Dutch firm PaperFoam, is made from potato or tapioca starch.

According to Dutch blog Bright, PaperFoam CEO Hans Arentsen said that Apple ordered ‘millions of PaperFoam packages’ for the new iPhone. PaperFoam also makes carton components for Motorola.

The PaperFoam tray will be inside a coated cardboard box, both of which are fully recyclable. Apple committed to reducing its environmental impact in an open letter from Steve Jobs released in May 2007.

(Via The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW).)

TheDieline.com: The Leading Package Design Blog

A blog on packaging! Looks interesting…

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“TheDieline.com: The Leading Package Design Blog
The Ultimate Package Design Blog! TheDieline.com defines good graphic design and product packaging in consumer products in industries such as food and drink, bath and beauty, alcohol, and more. Well designed packaging establishes consumers’ perception of the brand and the product. We showcase the best work out there from around the world.

Little ideas adapted by big companies

A brilliant idea spotted by Ben at Noisy Decent Graphics. I never seem to buy the same bottle of wine twice because I can’t remember the ones I liked, so always seem to go for the same recognisable brands.
I wonder how this could be adapted for other areas?

One thing I wish bookshops would do, is have little labels so you could remember a book for later – even if it meant you’d buy it from somewhere else, I think the service would be a popular one. Or at the very least, put some pads and pens around the place so people can note book details down.

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Ben writes:

If you’re out and about. At a friends house for dinner or sommits. And you think think, ooh that was a nice bottle of wine I’ll have to remember what that was called. Except you won’t remember, because you’re a bit tipsy and you’ve got better things to be remembering.

Now that problem is solved. You simply tear off this little reminder. I always thought those notices you see in Universities with the little tear off strips cut into the bottom were a brilliant idea. It looks like someone has adapted this for Oxford Landing. I could imagine innocent using this. I bet people would collect those little labels.

Although I can’t help disagreeing with him on this point:

In fact, that’s one of my favourite types of ideas. One that just builds over time and then gets adapted by a business or an organsiation. A bit like those paths people make when they take the direct route through a park, rather than the badly designed route the developers have made. But that’s another post.

I think there’s something to be said for following the long and winding road (see what I did there?) rather than the crowd, especially if you’re walking through a park. A park’s not a short cut, it’s a park.

After all, the path least travelled…

(Via Noisy Decent Graphics.)

Are music graphics dead post-digital?

Adrian Shaughnessy writing in Design Week:

The music industry is set for massive upheaval, with digital distribution destabilising long-held business models. How will this affect the designers who create the all-important visual imagery? asks Adrian Shaughnessy

Those of you who’ve followed the EMI story in recent months will know that it’s a gripping tale of clashing cultures. In 2007, venture capital firm Terra Firma, run by Guy Hands, acquired the British record company for £3.2bn.

With a back catalogue that includes The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Coldplay and Cliff Richard, EMI is Britain’s only major record label, and one of only four ‘majors’ left in the world.
We can all enjoy a snigger at Guy Hands’ comments about artists having to be more productive, and the £200 000 spent on ‘fruit and flowers’ – a euphemism familiar to anyone with knowledge of the hedonism of the record industry. But Hands has correctly spotted that the record business is being run on an outmoded, unsustainable model. The business has to change, because its audience has changed.

In the new digital music environment, the consumer calls the shots. And the new generation of music fans want instant access to music via whatever platform they choose. And just as they do in other consumer sectors of the economy, they want to dictate how much they pay for it. While Hands wrestles with this, and with the vested interests of the powerful managers of the artists signed to his label, the most widely predicted outcome is that music will be given away free, with labels and bands deriving their income from advertising on download sites, and from live gigs – a boom area at a time of declining record sales.

But what about music industry designers? Is there still work for studios set up to service the music business? Zip Design was formed in the mid-1990s working almost exclusively for the record business, and today 60 per cent of the studio’s work is music-based. ‘We’ve noticed a drop in budgets,’ says creative director David Bowden, ‘but I’m optimistic that the digital music era will eventually generate lots of design work. Increasingly, we find that our work is coming from the live sector, and a large percentage of our music work now centres around live venues, clubs and events, and it’s growing fast.’

Brighton-based Red Design has moved from being an almost exclusively music-based design studio to one with a wider spread of clients. ‘At 35 per cent, last year was our lowest ever for music work,’ says Red creative director Ed Templeton, ‘although our total music income has remained pretty steady for the past three years.’ But as Templeton adds ruefully, ‘major label artwork budgets are the same today as they were when Red first opened its doors in 1996.’

How has the downloading scenario affected Red? ‘We’ve begun doing single covers whose only format will be download,’ notes Templeton. ‘Creatively, a 50mm square 72dpi canvas doesn’t give you much to play with, and financially it’s almost not worth bothering about. But if you are designing an album project and the download packshot is just one element of the artwork then it’s fine. That said, we’re actually still doing lots of really good projects with bands and record labels that care about their artwork.

‘We’ve been asked to do our first pitch where the winning firm will do album artwork, videos and websites,’ adds Templeton. ‘That seems like the way forward to me, and is exactly what we have been striving to do for music industry clients for the past few years.’ Striking work for Beck, Goldfrapp and The Enemy has made Big Active into one of the most highly regarded music industry design houses. ‘A large percentage of our output is music-based,’ notes creative director Gerard Saint, ‘but we’re all beginning to feel a squeeze on budgets – certainly with new and developing acts, and definitely in terms of print and production.’

‘We try to look at all campaigns that we create as having a holistic structure across different media from print to digital,’ adds Saint. ‘We try to use each medium appropriately to make use of the opportunities available in each.’ It’s an approach that can be seen in the group’s work for The Enemy’s We’ll Live And Die In These Towns album campaign. A slatted railway timetable board supplies a robust and practical visual framework for everything from CD covers to downloading individual songs.

But Saint is critical of the way labels view digital work. ‘Their thinking is that if it’s digital it must be cheap. There almost seems to be a naive attitude that things should cost less when created for digital usage when we all know that in commissioning terms the cost and value remain the same no matter what the usage. Ethical photography, image-making or graphic design do not become cheaper to produce just because the end usage lives in a virtual medium.’

However, since the music-buying public has come to equate digital with free, so too have the labels. Guy Hands is going to have to find a way round that if his label isn’t going to become part of an endangered species. It may already be too late.

Adrian Shaughnessy’s book Cover Art By: New Music Graphics is published by Laurence King on 7 April, at £24.95

Call to show car ‘lifetime price’

BBC News reports on an interesting idea to label cars more clearly:

Drivers should be helped to see that a ‘cleaner’ car is good for their bank balance as well as the environment, a UK government adviser has said.

In a report to be published alongside the Budget, Prof Julia King wants the lifetime costs of running a car to be prominently displayed in the showroom.

Currently, new car buyers are told the cost of owning a car for a year.

But Prof King argues it would be more persuasive to show running costs for a decade or longer.

The report says a 4.4 litre petrol Range Rover, driven 12,000 miles a year for 10 years, would cost more than £35,000 in petrol and vehicle excise duty.

Another family car – a diesel Peugeot 307 – would cost around £11,000.

Comparative figures

Prof King believes that information presented in this form will jolt buyers into greener choices.

She also proposes a colour-coded road tax disc dependent on emissions levels.

This would help to create peer pressure, and make it easier for local authorities to run schemes such as Manchester City Council’s offer of 25% discounts in car parks to owners of cleaner cars.

Paddy Dyson, NCP’s regional manager, says the city’s green badge parking scheme is not focused purely on the size of car.

‘What we are hoping to do is really reward people who chose to drive vehicles that are less damaging to the environment, rather than punish those people who drive gas-guzzlers,’ he said.

Prof King is urging the government to set up an advertising advisory group to ensure that much stronger messages on fuel efficiency and pollution are embedded in vehicle advertising.

Peugeot’s 307 costs less to run over a decade than a Range Rover
The AA’s Edmund King said there was a desperate need for clarity for car drivers among what he called the ¿green fog¿ of government and council incentives.

‘I think the best way of getting through to the public is showing them they can save money while being green.

‘If they knew with these record fuel prices they could save five, six or ten pounds a week by driving the same size car a more efficient car, then motorists will go for that,’ he said.

Prof King wants car manufacturers to be forced to publish comparative figures showing how their models compare with other manufacturers in the same class of car.

On biofuels, she counsels caution against the negative effects of an uncontrolled expansion, but suggests that the government mandates fuel companies to include a set proportion of biofuels in the mix at the pump.

Friends of the Earth and the RSPB are likely to argue that it would be better for the UK and EU to abandon biofuels targets altogether, until there is confidence that they can be produced without damaging the very environment they are supposed to protect.

How to sell chocolate

Naresh Ramchandani writes in The Guardian:

Call me a choco-Luddite, but isn’t a Twix essentially a Mars with shortbread in the shape of a KitKat? A Nestlé Crunch essentially an Aero with the chewy bits from a Picnic? But if a standard chocolate bar is relatively indistinguishable from other brands, cheap and easy to produce, how on earth do you sell one? Simple. By wrapping it in something that’s more distinct, more valuable and more important than the chocolate bar itself.

1. Wrap it in sex

This is what Cadbury’s Flake has done for years: beautiful women lie in baths or sit thoughtfully on the back of caravans and bite dreamingly and somewhat sexually into their Flakes in silent statements about a loveless world …

Flake advertising is a heady mixture of innuendo, broken hearts, chocolate and, as of last week, fame – as Joss Stone became the first famous Flake girl. Stone is beautiful, has already sung about pesky men in songs like You Had Me plus, like any true Flake girl, it seems she can eat chocolate and stay stick-thin. The ad shows her alone in the studio, singing the words of the famous Flake jingle as if it were a heartbreak anthem.

2. Wrap it in self-sacrifice

Think of the Creme Eggs campaign, where various eggs find ways to top themselves and release their inner goo to the world. The posters are OK, the games on the website are OK too, but the really funny part of the campaign is the television executions – where animated Creme Eggs use everyday objects like egg slicers and garlic crushers to commit goo-liberating hari-kari.

And am I overinterpreting a bit when I say that the ads are very timely? The eggs are here for Easter – according to my old RE teacher Easter is a time when, like the eggs, a famous historical figure gave his life to release goodness into the world. Is Cadbury’s using its new multimedia campaign not just to spread the word – but the word? Let’s see if it resurrects the campaign next year.

3. Wrap it in stimulation

Thanks to one of the country’s longest-lasting jingles, I grew up thinking that ‘a Mars a day helps you work, rest and play’. It is of course a total overclaim – if all these things could be experienced in some time-release sequence, Mars would be sold in capsules over the counter. If they could be experienced simultaneously, why would anyone bother with illegal drugs?

The old jingle is back – albeit with some judicious editing. A balanced diet ruling means that Mars cannot say ‘a Mars a day’ anymore – which may not be a bad thing.

4. Wrap it in nod and a wink

If the choc bar ad formula is to make a chocolate bar mean far more than it does, the perfect subversion of the formula is to mock that. Enter a man playing drums in a gorilla suit in by far the best chocolate bar ad of recent times.

If Flake is the bar of sex, is Dairy Milk the bar of passion and potency? The first time you watch the Dairy Milk ad, you find yourself wondering. Then the gorilla pounds the drums, Phil Collins sings over-earnestly, you giggle and know it isn’t so. It’s just a tasty piece of confectionery wrapped in a playful piece of advertising, just as profound as a bar of mass-produced chocolate should be.