Friday, 28 June 2013

Molson Canadian - The Beer Fridge

A proud yet friendly demonstration, suitable for Canadians and Molson Canadian. Only Canadians can open the Molson Beer Fridge.

#IAMCANADIAN


People have long made fun of Canadians for being too nice, but it turns out that the Canadian generosity of spirit comes in handy when you have a hankering for a cold beer. Molson placed bright red refrigerators in cities, on piers, and even along remote roadsides across Europe over 10 days. The catch? They were only accessible by scanning a Canadian passport. Once opened--by a Canadian--the fridge revealed a stock pile of Molson Canadian beer, which could be enjoyed by all.


Sean

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Burberry Kisses


Thanks to the advent of new technology love letters aren't what they used to be. While handwritten letters sent in the post could once literally be 'sealed with a loving kiss', today an 'x' or two at the end of an email or text can be as romantic as it gets.

But now Burberry, in association with Google, are aiming to bring some love back into our correspondence. They have invented 'Burberry Kisses' as a way of 'humanising technology through emotive digital experiences'.

What this means is users can log onto to Kisses.Burberry.com where they can send a personal kiss to a loved one. They can do this by either capturing a picture of their lips on a desktop camera or by kissing their touch screen mobile. If you're not able to provide a kiss of your own lips via a camera or touch screen, Burberry also have their own 'quick kisses' that can be sent. Before sending their kiss, users can then chose what lip colour they want from Burberry's range of shades including pinks, purples, nudes and reds.

They can then add a personal message before sending their kiss off digitally to their nearest and dearest. But the fun doesn't end there. The journey of each kiss is then brought to life through a personalised showing three-dimensional city skylines such as London and New York, charting the delivery progress from the sender's location to the recipient's. The personal element is added with the use of Google Earth and Street View technologies to show the letter winging its way to its destination.

Jo Curtis