Here are various odds and ends that have interested me enough to think they might interest you. Hope I'm right.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Puccino's



It's been too long, hasn't it? Sorry. But here I am again, because I've just been reading this post on Brand New about Puccino's. Their copy-driven branding is all created by one man, designer and illustrator Jim Smith. Smith was taken on virtually out of college, and given a three-month contract that has now lasted ten years.

I've certainly noticed their stuff on various railways stations. The biscuit pack in the shot above made me laugh out loud, and I love their CLOSED sign, too:



Puccino's tea

The funny (and, for once, copy-free) idea above was apparently shelved after complaints. Shame. But how many clients would take the deep breath required to run the poster below?



Or this cup?



There are lots more examples in this Flickr set. All good and charming. Good on Puccino's for rejecting so few.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

As names go, this is a stinker.


This is the new name for an American pool-cleaning product. Seriously. Can you believe it?

It's memorable, I'll give it that.

(Via Snark Hunting.)

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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Love the water, hate the name

Hate's a bit strong, really. But 'This Water' doesn't seem to me to have any of the charm, personality or, well, innocence of Innocent, its parent brand. ('Juicy Water' was much nicer, I thought.)

It probably hasn't, but it feels like this name has been through the branding mill, briefed out to earnest consultants with complex theories about the democratisation of information in a Web 2.0 multiverse.

It feels achingly 'now': at once informal and apparently friendly, while also being oblique and modish enough to make one feel one isn't quite in on the joke. It feels, to me, like a brand consultant's brand, not a consumer's brand.

It's a bit unfair to compare it with Innocent, of course. (Especially as I complain about everybody comparing everything to Innocent.) The whole point of the name change is to distinguish it from its illustrious parent. It needs to have its own voice.

But the Innocent name has succeeded, I think, because it links to the product in a direct, almost functional way, as well as being charming, human and original. By comparison, 'This Water' seems rather vague, and perhaps just an excuse to do labels that say things like 'There are 88 cranberries in THIS WATER...', etc.

Having tasted it, I can report that the water itself is delicious. I'll buy it for that reason. (And because they also contribute to Water Aid.) But for me, there won't be that added enjoyment of the brand and its language that you get with an Innocent smoothie.

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