Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Creative Ads in Unusual Places
Mondo Pasta
This is ad for Mini Cooper was placed at the Zurich (Switzerland) train station.
A billboard for Zwilling J.A. Henckels, famous knife-makers
"Thousands are held prisoners for their beliefs in places worse than this.
Write until you free them all. Amnesty International"
This is a clever ad for HSBC by Ogilvy & Mather Mumbai ad agency in India. The bank wanted to raise awareness of the dangers of global warming, so the ad guys glued an aerial photo of a city's skyscrapers to the base of a swimming pool.
Fedex whiteout cross walk ad
To celebrate swimwear designer Shay Todda's new collection, Nivea fashioned this Good-Bye Cellulite sofa for the event. You could call it a product demonstration carried out when our target thinks about cellulite the most.
"Reserved For Drunk Drivers"
Tangled phone lines are a common sight on the streets of Bangkok, so Procter & Gamble decided to take advantage of how they resembled long strands of tangled hair. To promote P&G's line of Rejoice conditioners, a large green comb was placed on the telephone lines, reading: "Tangles? Switch to Rejoice Conditioners."
A print of a cup of Folgers coffee was placed on top of manhole covers in New York City, USA. Wordings around the cup reads "Hey, City That Never Sleeps. Wake up. --from Folgers".
"The mouse pad that every guy needs." This controversial idea was done in Dubai by Sandeep Fernandes and Husen Baba Khan for the male deodorant, Axe.
Nationwide Insurance made use of the side of a building right through to the car park for this ad.
This promotional poster for a self defense school is quite creative: take one of the teeth and call for a free lesson at the self defense school.
Watch Around Water is a campaign designed to educate the public about what adequate supervision is, and encourage parents/guardians to take on the responsibility for adequately supervising their children while visiting public aquatic facilities.
This is an ad for a job recruiting company in Berlin, Germany. Depicting people working in the vending machines, ATMs, it delivers the message that ‘Life is too short for the wrong job'.
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