Need to know   20 : 09 : 17

Need to know
20 : 09 : 17

In today’s daily digest: Nike uses data to design collection, Ikea embraces augmented reality, Americans seek drug-free pain relief and more.

1. Kenzo relinquishes art direction for new campaign 2. Nike Advanced Apparel is designed from data 3. Ikea app incorporates Apple’s ARKit technology 4. Brodie Neill repurposes ocean plastic as furniture 5. Majority of Americans prefer drug-free pain relief 6. Thought-starter: Is the subscription model the future of fashion?

1. Kenzo relinquishes art direction for new campaign

Cabiria, Charity, Chastity by Natasha Lyonne for Kenzo

Global – Written and directed by American actor Natasha Lyonne, the short film Cabiria, Charity, Chastity follows Chastity, played by Maya Rudolph, as she journeys through the School of Clowns on a voyage of self-discovery and acceptance.

The 13-minute long surreal film features a host of well-known names, including Saturday Night Live’s Fred Armisen, Macaulay Culkin and Matt Lucas, who help Chastity to face her future by playing out her Vaudevillian past.

‘We told [Natasha] we had a design philosophy of what the collection was about, but which she didn’t need to incorporate,’ says Humberto Leon, creative director at Kenzo. In our Beyond Product Placement microtrend, LS:N Global explores how fashion brands are offering complete creative control to people outsiders to offer a fresh perspective to their advertising campaigns.

2. Nike Advanced Apparel is designed from data

Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike
Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike
Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike
Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike Advanced Apparel Exploration collection by Nike

Global – Sportswear brand Nike has designed its nine-piece Advanced Apparel Exploration collection using data collected from athletes to inform the design of the garments, a method explored in our Data Designers microtrend. The novel manufacturing method combines motion-mapping with technology that considers the stresses exerted by different urban environments on the body, such as temperature and humidity fluctuations when moving between the street and the office or the nightclub, to create a series of body maps.

These body maps – including an airflow map, sweat map and heat map – are combined into a single data set, which can then be fed through Nike’s knitting machines to manufacture the garment seamlessly from a single piece. ‘Over time, our understanding of the body in motion and new manufacturing techniques have started to converge,’ says Kurt Parker, vice-president of apparel design at Nike. For more on the advances taking place in robotic manufacturing, see our Fast Fabrication microtrend.

3. Ikea app incorporates Apple’s ARKit technology

IKEA Place

UK – The new augmented reality (AR) app, Ikea Place, enables users to visualise the brand’s furniture in their home before they buy. The app automatically scales items based on a room’s dimensions, allowing users to see how the piece fits into a room, and how light and shadows affect the surface of the fabric.

Building on Ikea’s use of AR in its 2014 catalogue, which similarly enabled customers to place furniture in their domestic space by scanning selected pages, the integration of Apple’s recently launched ARKit technology marks a significant shift beyond a gimmick and towards mainstream adoption.

With more than 2,000 Ikea products available in the app, the brand believes it could play a key role in the launch of future product lines. For more on how brands can use AR to drive consumer engagement, see our Insight Behaviour.

4. Brodie Neill repurposes ocean plastic as furniture

Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London
Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London
Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London Drop in the Ocean by Brodie Neill for London Design Festival, London

London – Designer Brodie Neill’s new furniture pieces crafted from recycled ocean plastic will be displayed in ME Hotel London for London Design Festival. The installation, Drop in the Ocean, is designed from Neill’s ocean terrazzo, a material that he first introduced at last year’s London Design Festival. Made using the same technique as regular terrazzo – a composite material that combines marble or granite with a binder – the three pieces of furniture have been designed to convert waste plastic into something aesthetically pleasing.

‘I want to make people reflect on their use of single-use plastics, make them more aware of their footprint,’ Neill told Dezeen. ‘There are 5.25 trillion pieces of plastic in the ocean, so this is a drop in the ocean compared to the scale of the problem, but every bit counts.’

Read our Opinion piece for more on how design can be used as a medium to encourage long-term thinking.

5. Majority of Americans prefer drug-free pain relief

New research by Gallup-Palmer College of Chiropractic has found that most American adults prefer to treat physical pain with a drug-free approach. Of the nearly 6,300 people surveyed, 44% viewed prescription drug misuse as a prevalent problem in their local area, on a par with heroin addiction. For more on why consumers are turning away from traditional medication towards digital therapies, see our Smartphone Therapies microtrend.

6. Thought-starter: Is the subscription model the future of fashion?

As another fashion season in London draws to a close, journalist Josh Walker explores whether a subscription model could provide a potential solution in slowing fashion down.

Collaborative consumption is on the rise, something we explored in our Post-ownership Products microtrend. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, 57% of Millennials agree that ease of access now replaces the prestige of ownership and Generation Z have grown up with services such as Uber, Spotify and Netflix.

As something with so much appeal, should fashion, an industry focused on intense turnaround and an outdated retail model, be taking more notice?

Start-up subscription brand Higher is one brand championing this cause, and proposes an alternative model for fashion consumption by enabling consumers to pay a monthly fee to hire archive pieces from designers such as Prada and Maison Martin Margiela. Another is Toronto-based Boro, which has created a community of fashion consumers who pay other fashion consumers to rent luxury pieces from their wardrobes.

As a sustainable stance on over-consumption, this circular approach to fashion doesn’t just allow for the newness that fashion is so hungry for, but could help eliminate idle capacity – the clothes hanging in our wardrobes.

Read the full opinion piece here.

Higher, London Higher, London
Discover More News
The Trend: Skintellectual Bodycare

News

The Trend: Skintellectual Bodycare

Bodycare is getting an upgrade, driven by consumer demand for science-backed, active and ingredient-led products and treatments that contribute to ...
Beauty : Skincare : Longevity
The Big Idea: India’s Beauty Playground

News

The Big Idea: India’s Beauty Playground

To tap into India’s booming beauty market, global and local brands are using skincare-infused make-up, men’s grooming innovations and localised mar...
Beauty : Retail : Indian Beauty Market
The Campaign: Colgate champions smile diversity with The Beauty of Gaps campaign

News

The Campaign: Colgate champions smile diversity with The Beauty of Gaps campaign

Colgate is challenging beauty standards and celebrating smile diversity with its latest campaign, My Smile is My Superpower.
Beauty : Diversity : Health And Wellness
The Viewpoint: Embracing True-Age Beauty in China

News

The Viewpoint: Embracing True-Age Beauty in China

Sue Kyung Lee, global CEO of beauty brand SK-II, tells LS:N Global why its recent ad campaign in China sparked passionate discussions about how wom...
Beauty : China : Ageing
The Space: Liberty's Fragrance Lounge

News

The Space: Liberty's Fragrance Lounge

On 15 March 2024, luxury department store Liberty opened The Fragrance Lounge, its new innovative space redefining how scents are discovered a...
Beauty : Retail : Fragrance
Download the Future Forecast 2025 report

News

Download the Future Forecast 2025 report

Now that you know what shaped 2024, discover what’s on the horizon. Download our Future Forecast 2025 report comprising 50 new trends across 10 key...
Future Forecast
The Trend: AI Edu-play-tion

News

The Trend: AI Edu-play-tion

In our AI Edu-play-tion microtrend report, we talk to the innovators using generative artificial intelligence to re-imagine screen-free educational...
Technology : AI Education : Gen Alpha
The Big Idea: Five brands shaping the future of voice-activated AI wearables

News

The Big Idea: Five brands shaping the future of voice-activated AI wearables

A significant shift towards touchless devices is playing out in the technology industry, driven by increased commercialisation and accessibility of...
Technology : Voice-Activated AI : Wearable Tech Innovations
The Campaign: Camdom is the world’s first digital condom for safer intimacy

News

The Campaign: Camdom is the world’s first digital condom for safer intimacy

This Sexual Health Awareness Month (September 2024), condom brand Billy Boy and creative agency Innocean Berlin unveiled Camdom, an app that acts a...
Technology : Camdom App : Digital Condom
The Viewpoint: How to master AI

News

The Viewpoint: How to master AI

AI was on everyone’s lips in 2023 as the curiosity about large language models – from individuals and businesses – grew significantly.
Technology : AI Adoption : Mastering AI
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN