Tapping the crowds for sustainable ideas and funding

Eco & Sustainability Published on 25 June 2010 in Eco & Sustainability

If crowdsourcing can be used to help tackle economic problems in Ireland—not to mention those of the more personal kind—then why not the global environmental imperative? That, indeed, is just the aim of the Globe Forum, which hopes to use crowdsourcing to help people around the world build a more sustainable future.

Now in beta, Stockholm-based Globe Forum operates conferences and an active online community to help match the creators of good ideas with those who can help bring them to life. Specifically, the organization hopes to bring together innovators, entrepreneurs, investors, corporations and the public sector in a natural space “where breakthrough solutions can occur collaboratively,” as the site puts it. Its matchmaking service, for instance, aims to match supply and demand for sustainable solutions, with expert facilitation, consulting and project management by the Globe Forum organization. Its intelligence arm, meanwhile, strives to provide market-leading research, industry insight and access to innovation. A crowdfunding section lets potential investors browse through promising new project ideas and fund the ones they like, while projects and organizations with sustainability challenges to be solved can post those in Globe Forum's “Challenges” section for a little collective brainstorming. After hosting a conference in Stockholm this spring, Globe Forum's next large-scale event will take place in Dublin in November.

Anyone out there still doubt the power of the Global Brain? We didn't think so. Sustainability entrepreneurs: this one's for you!

Website: www.globeforum.com
Contact: info@globeforum.com

Spotted by: Johan Lofmark

Contest by wearable magazine asks participants to be kind

Fashion & Beauty Published on 24 June 2010 in Fashion & Beauty

It wasn't too long ago that we wrote about T-Post for a second time—the focus then was its augmented reality t-shirt—yet now here we are covering the innovative company again. The reason this time? Looks like the creative minds behind the Swedish wearable magazine are the latest to succumb to the “random acts of kindness” trend we've been following for some time.

Last month T-Post kicked off its Real-Life Superhero Contest in the hopes of encouraging participants to do something good for society. Launched to coincide with the magazine's May issue—entitled “I Am Shining Star” and designed to highlight what T-Post says is a growing, modern-day superhero trend—the contest asked entrants to don a costume and then take to the streets to help others. Said costume could include the “I Am Shining Star” shirt or not, as long as the wearer performed some good deed, captured the act on video and posted it on YouTube by midnight on June 14. Winners are now being decided; the video that received the most views by the contest's deadline will win USD 1,000, while a separate winner chosen by T-post's editors—for a combination of factors including costume design, deed performed and overall entertainment value--will win a free T-post subscription for life.

The results are pouring in, and so far it seems clear that kindness really can be good for business. Greed is so yesteryear; time to make generosity the name of your brand's game! (Related: Free umbrellas on rainy days aim to inspire kindnessCanadian credit union gives people ten-dollar bills to give awayOnline game focuses on real-world kindnessClothing brand asks its wearers to be kindRandom acts of kindness for Hyatt's most loyal guests.)

Website: www.t-post.se/hero
Contact: info@t-post.se

Spotted by: Lieke Voermans

Smart devices help households monitor their energy use

Eco & Sustainability Published on 13 April 2010 in Eco & Sustainability


Whether it's to shrink their carbon footprint or boost their bank balance, few consumers will dispute the need for decreased energy use. Some steps are relatively easy—switching off lights, or going easy on the climate control. But for real resource management, households need to know exactly how much they're using. To help them out, companies all over the world are launching smart energy monitoring devices and systems. A few examples we've spotted recently:

Promoting shorter showers, Efergy's Shower Time tracks how much water is used when showering. It comes with a calibration bag to determine how long a specific showerhead takes to run through one liter of water. That number is then saved in the timer's memory, along with the maximum amount of water someone would like to use. During a shower, the timer indicates how much water has been used so far, and sets off an alarm when it's time to turn off the tap.

Combining hard data with an appealing interface, the Tendril Vision is a one-stop dashboard for household energy management. It not only lets users review their own current and historical energy consumption, but also that of their neighbourhood. It displays real-time pricing information, alerts users of upcoming price changes, and helps automate routine tasks to circumvent peak load times. Designed by IDEO, the system presents all of this complex information through a simple and elegant interface on a touchscreen display, developed to make energy management part of a household's daily routine.

Getting kids in on the action, Tio is a light switch ghost that shows children how much energy they're using. Tio starts off green and happy, and becomes red and angry if lights are left on too long. Information from the light switch is sent to a computer program that allows children and watchful parents to track their lighting use over a period of time. Besides reminding kids to turn off lights, the device is also a playful way of making them aware of the need for energy conservation. The concept was created by Tim Holley, a British designer based in Germany.

Like the colour-changing ghost, the Power Aware cord relies on ambient visual cues to remind consumers of their energy consumption. Launched by Static!, an interactive design agency, the cord glows blue when turned on, lighting up more brightly as energy use increases.

From partnering with appliance manufacturers to distributing smart devices through utility companies, this area is rife with business opportunities. Time to increase energy awareness in your part of the world?

This post is sponsored by PG&E (the Pacific Gas and Electric Company) as part of their wider focus on fighting climate change. As always, Springwise is adamant about maintaining editorial objectivity—PG&E asked us to write about energy conservation, but had no further involvement in the content of this or other posts.

Check out PG&E's We Can Do This website for more, including a feature on the Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., a sustainable brewery.

T-shirt uses augmented reality for virtual webcam game

Fashion & Beauty Published on 8 April 2010 in Fashion & Beauty

Longtime Springwise readers may recall T-Post, the Swedish company we wrote about back in 2006 for its news-based t-shirt subscription service. T-Post is still going strong, and we couldn't resist mentioning one of its latest issues: an augmented reality t-shirt that lets wearers play a virtual game of Rock-Paper-Scissors.

Focusing on the topic of higher education, T-Post's Issue No. 51 was designed by 23-year-old Marc Stromberg to reflect the increasing incorporation of games and other recreational activities into mainstream education. With technical help from creative collective Moment 77, Stromberg's t-shirt design features images of real rocks, paper and scissors. The cool part? When wearing the t-shirt, T-post subscribers can stand in front of a webcam for the ability to play a virtual game of Rock-Paper-Scissors with a computer-generated arm that appears to be coming out of the shirt. A video demonstrates the virtual game in action. Though the t-shirt is no longer available, a printable version of the image is available on T-post's site.

We've now seen augmented reality in a range of apps focused on everything from music festivals to architectural tourism to virtual makeovers, but this is the first time we've seen it used in clothing. How could *your* tech-savvy brand use AR to forge some new OFF=ON connections? (Related: T-shirt comes with free music downloads.)

Website: www.t-post.se/rockpaperscissors
Contact: info@t-post.se

Spotted by: Jenny Lau

Coffee mug for moms that won't scald tykes

Style & Design Published on 25 February 2010 in Style & Design

Toddlers and young children are notorious for their desire to grab whatever might be dangerous for them, and hot beverages are no exception. In fact, some 100,000 children each year are scalded by hot drinks and foods in the United States alone, according to the American Burn Association. Enter the MummyMug, a new innovation that uses a lip-activated lid to prevent drinks from spilling.

Parents simply fill the MummyMug with their favourite hot drink, secure the screw-on lid, and start sipping. The pressure of the drinker's top lip against the top of the lid causes the valve to open. It automatically closes up after every sip, ensuring that the MummyMug remains safe if accidentally knocked over.

Made from a material that gives the look and feel of ceramics but with shatterproof durability, the patent-pending mug is recyclable and guaranteed BPA-free.

The Swedish-made MummyMug, sold by the Dutch company of the same name, will hit European stores this autumn. There's no word yet on pricing. Parenting and baby retailers around the world: better sign up now ...

Website: www.mummymug.com
Contact: info@mummymug.com

Surveys by iPhone at Swedish 7-Eleven

Retail Published on 7 December 2009 in Retail

Regular Springwise readers may remember our coverage this past spring of the iPhone app used by Swedish 7-Eleven to entice users into the store. That app combined a store locator with coupons for free coffee and biscotti, and now the company has added a third feature: the ability to conduct customer surveys by mobile phone.

When it's first started up, the new version of 7-Eleven's iPhone application displays the latest offer from a participating manufacturer. The first company to test out the new app, for example, was Wrigley’s, which offered a free pack of its new Juicy Fruit gum. Consumers who enter their phone number then get a mobile coupon, redeemable at the nearest 7-Eleven store. Upon redeeming that coupon, consumers are sent a minisurvey by phone. Their answers to that survey will ensure they get more such offers in the future, each signaled by a “message” symbol on the iPhone's home screen. The new app—developed with Swedish production agency Lonely Duck, publicity bureau Peacock and Bonnier Response Media—can be downloaded free of charge from 7-Eleven’s homepage or from Apple's App Store.

What's even better than convincing the relatively affluent hordes of iPhone users to come in to your store? Answer: giving your brand partners a way to collect customer feedback quickly and easily each time they do. Retailers and brands around the globe: time to put the mobile ecosystem to work for you! ;-)

Website: www.7-eleven.se
Contact: www.7-eleven.se/kontakt.html

Spotted by: Robert Olzon

Virtual studio lets anyone be a fashion editor

Fashion & Beauty Published on 10 September 2009 in Fashion & Beauty

Just a few weeks ago we wrote about My Fashion Plate, a wardrobe management community for clothes hounds. While a variety of features are available on that site—including even personal shopping services—Looklet is a new contender that focuses exclusively on the design end with a virtual studio through which users can mix and match real designer clothes.

Now in beta, Stockholm-based Looklet offers a selection of seven models—each with various facial expressions—38 backdrops and almost 2,000 items of clothing and accessories that can be combined to try out new looks and combinations. All the clothes items are actual, existing pieces selected by stylists from real designers; users need only drag and drop them onto the model of their choice to create their own personal look, which is viewable from multiple perspectives. Once they've created a style they like, they can save it and share it with other users of the site as well as with friends on Facebook, Twitter and elsewhere. Some 76,000 users have already created more than 600,000 outfits on Looklet, all browsable, searchable and available for remixing.

There's no doubt both Looklet and competitor Polyvore offer the opportunity for fashion brands to engage with their target audiences in a much more compelling way than traditional advertising ever could. While Polyvore provides e-commerce links to enable shopping, however, Looklet currently does not, instead simply providing general links to the designers' sites. Seems to us users will eventually want to convert their dream creations into reality—one to partner with on the e-shopping end to help make that possible? (Related: Fashion blog is street version of shopping mags.)

Website: www.looklet.com
Contact: info@looklet.com

Spotted by: Ozgur Alaz

The world's latest music, streamed city by city

Entertainment Published on 7 August 2009 in Entertainment

The internet may have given music fans unprecedented access to the world's music, but finding it in any kind of organized way can be a challenge. Now providing a location-based approach comes CitySounds.fm, a music browser that streams the latest music of the world, city by city.

Created by a Swedish duo for Music Hack Day last month, CitySounds.fm lists major cities from around the world, with those most frequently selected at the top. Listeners simply click on a city name to hear a selection of the latest music from that city. All of the tracks played come from professional audio platform SoundCloud.com, while photo images accompanying each city name come from flickr. Using CitySounds.fm is free, and tracks and cities are updated constantly to reflect each city's musical trends.

Like Harman Kardon's trip planner with suggested travelling music, and Louis Vuitton's MP3 tours of Chinese cities, CitySounds.fm provides consumers with a way to connect sound and music to specific places, whether or not they're travelling there themselves.

Website: www.citysounds.fm
Contact: henrik@henrikberggren.com

Spotted by: Miriam Brafman

Single-use toilet bag turns human waste into fertilizer

Non-profit, Social cause Published on 3 June 2009 in Non-profit, Social cause

It's a sobering fact that a full 40 percent of the world's population—some 2.6 billion people—lack regular access to a toilet. Add to that the fact that one child dies every 15 seconds from water contamination, and it's not hard to see the motivation behind the Peepoo bag.

One of the UN Millennium Development Goals, set in 2000, is to halve by 2015 the proportion of people without sustainable access to drinking water and sanitation, but so far progress has been minimal. With that in mind, Swedish Peepoople created the Peepoo bag to serve as a personal, portable and low-cost latrine for all the many people who don't have one. Designed for use sitting, squatting or standing, the single-use, biodegradable plastic bag measures 14 by 38 cm and is lined with a urea-coated gauze layer that disinfects all waste. Used bags are odour-free for at least 24 hours and are safe for burial underground. Within two to four weeks after use, however, their contents get converted to high-quality fertiliser—something that's also rare in many areas and so could become a source of income and further enrichment for an individual or village. Following field tests last year in Kenya and India, the Peepoo bag is scheduled to begin production this summer.

Along with such efforts as distributing free insect nets to children in malaria-ridden areas and abolishing fees for school uniforms in poor countries, the Peepoo bag qualifies as a quick-win project that could rapidly improve the lives of many people. One to get in on, help out with, or be inspired by!

Website: www.peepoople.com
Contact: info@peepoople.com

Spotted by: Robert Olzon

Swedish hotels serve healthy meals for kids, courtesy of Jamie Oliver

Food & Beverage Published on 24 May 2009 in Food & Beverage

British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has already put children's nutrition in the spotlight with his School Dinners documentaries and Feed Me Better campaign. Now, through a partnership with Swedish Scandic Hotels, he's bringing his philosophy right to the table for travellers with children.

The three-year partnership will focus on a different target group each year, beginning with children. Specifically, starting this summer, kids will be able to try out completely new children’s menus at all 150 of Scandic’s hotels. Many traditional meals will be revamped; other, new ones will also be introduced, featuring natural preparations and organic ingredients. Kids will begin by choosing their food from a photo-based menu designed specifically with them in mind, according to Fashtastic. They'll also be able to assemble their own salad. Entrees will include spaghetti and meatballs, while dessert will feature ice cream “Smushins”—something Oliver apparently invented as kid—including vanilla ice cream with healthy toppings like fresh fruit and berries, "smushed" together with a spatula by the kids themselves.

What's the best way to impress a parent? Take good care of their kids. A concept to emulate throughout the hospitality industry! (Related: Happy healthy mealsMore meal prep & cooking instruction, this time by Jamie Oliver.)

Website: www.scandichotels.com
Contact: www.scandichotels.com/settings/Side-foot/Customer-service/Contact-us1/

Spotted by: Robert Olzon

Online marketplace for secondhand IKEA furniture

Homes & Housing Published on 13 May 2009 in Homes & Housing

Based—where else?—in Sweden, I LOVE IKEA is a new online marketplace for consumers looking to buy and sell secondhand IKEA furniture.

Buyers can search by region and city to find items nearby, or by category: bathroom, kitchen, office, etc. Product descriptions include the usual: photo, price and contact details, but are generally brief—after all, buyers can easily find more information in IKEA's catalogue. Placing ads is free until August 1st. After that, the site will charge sellers a small fee per ad.

On every general classifieds site, from Craigslist to preloved.co.uk, there's an abundance of secondhand IKEA goods on offer. According to I LOVE IKEA, they're included in over 20,000 ads per month in newspapers and online marketplaces. And that's just in Sweden. So it makes sense to create a marketplace dedicated to IKEA's wares, making it easier for consumers to locate items by name or type. I LOVE IKEA isn't affiliated with the object of their affection; as they put it, they're "a tribute to IKEA's amazing range, and a response to recent developments towards a more sustainable society." Following its launch in Sweden, I LOVE IKEA aims to expand to the rest of Europe soon.

Enduringly popular around the world, IKEA will no doubt continue to spawn businesses that offer complementary goods and services. Need more inspiration to start an IKEA 'feeder business' of your own? Check out slip covers for sofas by Bemz, delivery to Nasheville by ModerNash, decorative adhesives by Grippiks and add-ons by Parts of Sweden, all of which have built successful companies on an IKEA foundation.

Website: www.iloveikea.se
Contact: info@iloveikea.se

Spotted by: Robert Olzon

Furniture guaranteed for 300 years

Style & Design Published on 11 May 2009 in Style & Design

We may live in a world of fast food, fast fashion and fast-moving change, but it's starting to look like things may be slowing down. Earlier this year we wrote about Welsh brand Howies and its line of clothing intended to be passed down through generations, and since then we learned of Brikolör, a brand-new Swedish company that designs its furniture to last 300 years.

Debuted last month at the International Furniture Fair in Milan, Brikolör aims to manufacture furniture "with a guaranteed emotional and technical durability of 300 years." A variety of colourful pieces created from ash and larch make up Brikolör's current six-prototype line, with prices ranging from EUR 500 for a varnished Älta-Älta stool to EUR 8,000 for a pattern-stained Hägg cabinet.

There's nothing like a recession and a focus on environmental sustainability to make consumers value longevity. Fast, you're history; lasting value, you're here to stay! ;-)

Website: www.brikolor.comtwitter.com/brikolor
Contact: info@brikolor.com

Free coffee for iPhone users at Swedish 7-Eleven

Retail Published on 27 April 2009 in Retail

An iPhone application developed for 7-Eleven Sweden combines a store locator with coupons for a free coffee and biscotti. After downloading the app, users plug in their phone number and receive a unique coupon code on their iPhone. To claim their coffee, they just show the code to a 7-Eleven clerk; no purchase necessary. The coupon is only valid once, and free coffee in April will be followed by free ice cream in May.

The application, developed by Stockholm-based digital agency Lonely Duck, was downloaded 2,500 times in the week it launched—a considerable number given the size of the Swedish iPhone community, and enough to place it in the top 10 of free app downloads.

7-Eleven hasn't launched the app in other markets yet, but it's a smart example for other iPhone-loving retailers to follow: don't just help (a relatively affluent group of) consumers find your store, but give them a good reason to visit and spend money while they take you up on your generous offer.

Website: www.7-eleven.se
Contact: www.7-eleven.se/kontakt.html

Spotted by: Robert Olzon

DigiWall: computer game meets climbing wall

Gaming Published on 26 January 2009 in Gaming

We've written about a number of games designed to get kids off the couch and into some exercise, but recently one of our spotters alerted us to one we hadn't yet seen: DigiWall, a structure that combines a climbing wall with gaming.

Designed for use in public places like museums and shopping malls, DigiWall is a climbing wall with high-end surround-sound whose grips include both lights and sensors that react when they are touched. A variety of games, contests, challenges and creative experiences are possible on the wall as a result, using a combination of visual and audio feedback and body movements. Games currently available, for example, include simple ones based on physical activity and speed as well as more complex ones involving flexibility, bodily control and tactical skill. New games are also being added all the time, the wall's Swedish maker says. When not in use, DigiWall becomes a decorative sound and light installation.

Much like Wii, location-based games and gyms that use games to keep kids moving, DigiWall could be another weapon in the battle against childhood obesity—not to mention a novel and entertaining public attraction. Kid-friendly restaurants, stores, malls, museums—even airports or schools: This one's for you! (Related: Poolside climbing wallsIn-store wave riding.)

Website: www.digiwall.se
Contact: info@digiwall.se

Spotted by: Susanna Haynie

Peer-to-peer camping grounds: renting out the back yard

Tourism & Travel Published on 17 December 2008 in Tourism & Travel

Camping, an ancient form of holiday accommodation, is now going peer-to-peer: Single Spot Camping connects anyone who owns a suitably sized piece of land (‘even your garage entrance’, says the site) with those looking for a place to pitch their tent.

Like the more established concept of couch surfing, the Swedish startup aims to create travel experiences that are more unique and personal than staying at a regular camping ground. Additional benefits are the small stream of income created for hosts, and the fact that—unlike with couch surfing—both guests and hosts can maintain a sense of privacy.

As the site’s still very new, all listings made before 31 December 2008 will be displayed for a year free of charge. In 2009, listings will cost the landowner EUR 40 per year. Any plots of land sitting empty in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Australia or the United States can currently be registered, with the site aiming to become popular with campers and site owners in Europe, North America and Australia. We’ve covered similar concepts for spare bedrooms and off-street parking spots—what’s next?

Website: www.singlespotcamping.com
Contact: info@singlespotcamping.com

Spotted by: Helene Frick

For the first time, jeans to be made in North Korea

Fashion & Beauty Published on 3 December 2008 in Fashion & Beauty

While unique, locally produced goods distinguish many nations in world markets, notable exceptions include North Korea, whose self-imposed isolation keeps it conspicuously absent from the global economy. Motivated by that very isolation, a group of young Swedes has launched an endeavour to forge connections with the nation through a startup company that will be the first to produce jeans in North Korea and export them to the rest of the world.

Coming from backgrounds in advertising and PR, the Swedish trio are now operating as Noko Jeans, which they say is "our attempt to approach and get closer to North Korea." After several meetings with North Korean government officials, the Swedes were invited to visit the nation this summer, and ended up securing a manufacturer: North Korea's largest mining company. The first samples arrived in Stockholm in October, and the jeans are due to become available next year, Noko's founders say.

In an increasingly globalized world, consumers see considerable value in products that are (still) made here, as our sister site trendwatching.com would say. Will North Korean jeans really be added to the list? That remains to be seen. One to watch!

Website: www.nokojeans.com
Contact: info@nokojeans.com

Free accommodation for visiting creatives

Tourism & Travel Published on 21 November 2008 in Tourism & Travel

Most of the free love we've written about so far has come in relatively small doses--free photocopies, free phone calls, free taxi rides, for example. A new venture from Swedish clothing brand Elvine, however, now offers select creative types nothing less than a free place to stay.

Creators Inn is a fully equipped room with a balcony overlooking the city of Gothenburg, Sweden, and just a 10 minute walk from the city centre. Working with local independent organizers, Elvine's aim is to use the room to host artists and creatives visiting Gothenburg at no charge and with no strings attached. Foreign visitors are given priority, but anyone can apply by making a case for why they should be allowed to use the room. So far, artist, songwriter and blogger Momus and soul musician Jomo are among the guests who have been accommodated.

Elvine explains: "With Creators Inn by Elvine we tried to add some creativity to the equation, labeling what we do as CSR - Creative Social Responsibility. By offering visiting creators free accommodation, we hope to remind people of a lovely little thing called hospitality. And in addition to making the visiting creators happy and Gothenburg a more interesting city because of their presence, we hope this simple idea can be exported and implemented around the globe."

With the potential to generate a new, hip image and no small amount of goodwill among business partners and visitors, Elvine's example may well be one worth emulating for creative brands around the globe. Just furnish a room with a view, set out a doormat, and you're good to go! ;-)

Website: www.creatorsinn.com
Contact: manager@creatorsinn.com

Spotted by: Cecilia Biemann

Swedish fashion brand launches its own secondhand store

Retail Published on 9 July 2008 in Retail

Swedish fashion label Filippa K is promoting a longer life for its products by letting customers sell them in its very own secondhand store, which just opened in Stockholm.

While Filippa K came up with the concept for a branded secondhand shop, the day-to-day business will be run by the founder of Judit Second Hand, a popular destination for vintage finds from the sixties and seventies. Situated next door to Judit's, at Hornsgatan 77, Filippa K Second Hand sells women's and men's clothing, and accessories. Items brought in by customers are sold on commission. In addition to used items, the boutique will also sell collection samples, which should help bring in the fashionistas. The shop is part of a larger effort to become more environmentally aware, and Filippa K doesn't aim to make any money reselling their garments.

Filippa K's creative director, Filippa Knutsson, stated that the concept is fully in line with what the brand stands for, pointing out that resales are made possible by Filippa K's high quality and timeless design. While brands like Patagonia and Uniqlo have programs in place that either recycle fabric from used items or donate them to charity, we like Filippa K's emphasis on reusing clothing, stressing its longevity and creating a healthy antidote to fast fashion. If you run a well-regarded secondhand store, now's the time to contact local brands that might be interested in following in Filippa K's footsteps. And the concept could be applied to other products, too. How about a branded bookstore dedicated to selling used Penguin books?

Website: www.filippa-k.se
Contact: info@filippa-k.se

Spotted by: Pastan via MZ

Avatar fashion for the real world

Fashion & Beauty Published on 30 June 2008 in Fashion & Beauty

With the rise of virtual worlds, the burgeoning fashion market for avatars brought real-world brands and designs into the virtual realm. Now, the trend appears to be going the other way as companies begin to let consumers get their avatar fashions made into real-world clothes.

Avatar clothes have become big business in the virtual world, and a new partnership between Swedish avatar dress-up site Stardoll and German t-shirt commerce site Spreadshirt could allow users to take virtual clothes they create or see online and get them made into the real thing for use in the real world. To start, users will be able to take logos or graphics from popular labels in the Stardoll world and get them emblazoned on real-life t-shirts, hats and other items. Eventually, though, the possibilities could expand dramatically, Matt Palmer, Stardoll's executive vice president and general manager, told Virtual Worlds News in April. "We know through our research that kids would love to get their hands on them," he explained. "The opportunity allows us to experiment with what we can take from our world that's a simple idea that kids can customize, get made and have sent to them. That sort of translation of virtual world to physical world—I view this as the first step in looking at what that could look like for us."

Virtual world Gaia has also begun selling real-world fashion on its site, and one can't help but wonder how long it will be before Second Life and other popular virtual worlds starts experimenting with something similar. From there, of course, the next natural step will be to let users sell their real-life creations for real-world money, just as they can currently sell their virtual ones. One to watch!

Websites: www.stardoll.comwww.spreadshirt.com
Contacts: www.stardoll.com/en/help/contact.phpwww.spreadshirt.com/us/US/About-us/Contact-1336

Spotted by: Iconoculture via RK

White lines make paper stand out

Style & Design Published on 7 May 2008 in Style & Design

People have used dark-lined writing paper since medieval times and over the years, a lot of bleach has been used to provide a contrasting white background. Swedish Whitelines, on the other hand, makes carbon-neutral writing paper that uses white lines against a light grey background.

Traditional dark-lined paper not only depends on the use of bleach for a contrasting background, it also can conflict with lines and letters drawn or written on its surface. Dark lines show up on photocopies too, often making for muddy, difficult-to-view copies. Stockholm designer Olof Hansson came up with the idea of Whitelines as a way to eliminate those problems. With a focus on the environmental consequences of its operations, the company tracks and labels its own carbon footprint in collaboration with NEWA, the North Environment & Weather Agency. Through a partnership with paper producer Stora Enso forged just last month, meanwhile, it uses a carbon dioxide-neutral paper as a base for its products. Whitelines now offers pads of its patented paper with a variety of bindings, including spiral, glue and saddle stitch, through select retailers in Canada, Germany, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the UK.

Whitelines was named Innovator of the Year by ALMI Stockholm last year, and in January it was nominated in the New Product Innovation and Emerging Vendor categories at the European Office Products Awards in Frankfurt. With its paradigm-busting appearance, Whitelines' eco-iconic qualities are sure to appeal to the rapidly growing eco-minded masses. Remember: it's not enough to be green; you have to help consumers show the world that they are, too. Think green, think different, think iconic!

Website: www.whitelines.se
Contact: info@whitelines.se

Spotted by: Johan Lofmark

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