Our selection of juicy, scrumptious, and noteworthy articles of the week...
 
RETAIL
- Slideshow of the 20 Most Beautiful Bookstores in the World (we love Cook & Book & Corso Como).
- Ecommerce sales projected to reach $200 billion according to MasterCard Spending Pulse.
- J. C. Penny launches 'fair and square' pricing plan. Is this the future of retail? (let's hope not).
 
FOOD
- 2012 Restaurant Industry Forecast: Sales growth projected to vary from region to region.
- YouTube is targeting food video streams in its attempt to offer more curated content.
 
FASHION
- Ab Fab’s Edina and Patsy front Alexis Bittar’s new advertising campaign.
- A Little Bit Eternal: AnOther's intimate film portrait of Rick Owens & Michele Lamy by Danielle Levitt.
 
CULTURE
- Fast Company: Culture Eats Strategy For Lunch (guess it was hungry).
- Study by Ehrenberg-Bass Institute in Advertising Age reveals that only 1% of Facebook 'Fans' Engage With Brands.
 
 
Agyness Deyn in Here
On the success of innovative film collaborations by NOWNESS to portray the LVMH brands (and cohorts) with a differentiated light, we predict more brands will invest in brand-building video content to elevate the customer experience.
 
Case in point — The Luxury Collection original short film, “Here,” directed by Luca Guadagnino.
 
 
The film was produced by Academy Award winner Tilda Swinton and Waris Ahluwalia (the brand’s newest Global Explorer) and reunites Ahluwalia with Guadagnino, the director of their Golden Globe-nominated film, I Am Love, to offers a glimpse into the hidden treasures and iconic properties across the United States.
 
Starring Agyness Deyn, the short explores the beauty of three destinations set to music by Jason Schwartzman and Woody Jackson.
 
The brand's mantra, "Life Is A Collection of Experiences. Let Us Be Your Guide," led the creative direction for the team to explore the unexpected joys of a cross-country journey. With romantic undertones, the ethereal, dreamlike sequence feels part Alfred Hitchcock tribute as the character uncovers clues along the adventure.
 
We love the poignant storyline as a tactic for communicating escapism in a modern technologically charged culture.

{source: Betsy, WWD, The Luxury Collection}
A compilation of the best, relevant, and interest-worthy ideas and news from the past week...
 
CULTURE
Gilt Taste
{image: Gilt.com}
 
- Is “Content and Commerce” the future? As magazines & retail converge, where will the editorial line be drawn?
- NYC needs this: Virtual grocery shopping via phone using QR codes at subway stops in Prague.
 
 
FASHION
- Watch out Pinterest, PPR just invested $10m in Joe Einhorn’s company new website: The Fancy. (follow or re-pin @trendscaping on Pinterest)
- As Marc Jacobs-Dior talks halt; Fashionologie reports that Alexander Wang, Raf Simons, and Jason Wu are now being considered.
- According to IBM’s Coremetrics Benchmark, Mobile retail traffic projected to more than double this holiday season.
 
FOOD
{photo: EvolutionFresh.com}
 
- Starbucks, acquiring juice brand Evolution Fresh, will attempt to do with juice what it did with coffee.
- No surprises here: 2012 food trends, including the rise of Korean food trucks and fine dining, focus on consumer need according to Nation's Restaurant News
 
Color Elite
Pantone, the universal color matching system, is vital part of trends, graphics, printing, and apparel. Anyone who has launched a new logo or product can tell you that selecting the perfect red can be exhausting.
 
That's why we're stoked about a new e-swatch device, developed by master's degree student Chen Liao-hsun, called Color Elite. The portable invention matches, stores, and organizes a wide array of color swatch data from different fields and can be updated through an internet link.
 
Inspired by working with traditional paper color swatches which vary from industry to industry and don't contain a sufficiently broad range of colors, Liao-hsun created an alternative that does not become discolored or degenerated with humidity.

 

The invention also stores selected shades on a database and generate similar tones, offering the user different points of comparison.
 
We love the solution based thinking and innovation. The Color Elite will be a great addition across industries.
 
{source: Design Rulz}
There are buzzwords and there are great words. And sometimes, marketers turn great words into trash.
 
For example, Premium used to be a compelling word bound for potential greatness. The petrol industry drove the awareness of premium gasoline in the 80's to denote a better grade. Unfortunately, marketers in the food industry have driven premium, artisan and specialty into the ground. If you feel that you have to put premium or World Class as a descriptor of your confections, it's mute. (And, by the way, World Class was never a great term.)
 
Often words are overused. Personally, we made the decision to remove Bespoke (an undeniable great word), from the In Your Head website messaging as part of our redesign.  We still do consider our consultancy "made-to-order", but the word became overpopulated as it relates to design aesthetics particularly in fashion. Special edition products and custom items are not bespoke unless they are made by hand for a specific client/user. The same bespoke logic applies to Couture, which comes from the term haute couture, meaning exclusive custom-fitted clothing made-to-order for private clients with one or more fittings. Track suits with catch phrases on the backside are NEVER couture, regardless of the name brand.
 
The latest death of a great word came yesterday via our inbox. A dedicated email advertising a "curated prize package" of tampons. No joke.
curated tampons
{image: DailyCandy.com}
 
We've long been fans of Curate within this blog and as an additive to some of our clients temporary installations. The word, stemming from the term Curator, had become a term that brands and collaborators used to communicate a link between cultural heritage and consumerism in a post-recession environment. For us, curating demanded that the job skills of the owner, manager or buyer had evolved beyond seasonality with unique offerings that held greater meaning, research, and care than the standard quo.
 
It's unfortunate that marketers thought otherwise...
Curating tampons is beyond gross. It's time to flush the toilet.