Eco-friendly posters

April 2nd, 2008 by Brian Wylie

We recently pitched the business of a client who has very strong values when it comes to health and the environment.  We felt we needed to cater as much of the media plan with sustainable media as possible and thus was born “The Living Board”.

Don’t get the wrong idea - the board is really not alive, it is not organic in anyway.  The concept is simply that the material is a recyclable vinyl and then transformed into shopping bags and given out to consumers when the campaign is over.  It is also bio-degradable for the time down the road when the shopping bag is no longer needed.

Great idea Michelle and Jonathan.  No word yet on if we won the assignment, stay tuned.

I just stumbled across this on Trendhunter, which follows the above to a degree - recycled movie posters.  And no, I don’t nor do I ever plan to own one…

These pretty bags will delight many environmentally conscious women and if they happen to be film buffs, they will be doubly delighted. The bags are made of recycled movie billboards. Films such as Mission Impossible, The Bourne Ultimatum, Pride and Prejudice and a whole lot more, are featured on these unlikely canvases.

Outfitted with an inside zippered pouch and an elastic-over-metal closure, the Billboard Bags are one of a kind according to Ecoist. They sell for $48.00 and if you’re curious about which movies are represented in the gallery, here’s the breakdown:

1. Thunderbird
2. Pride and Prejudice
3. Bourne Ultimatum
4. Superbad
5. Mission Impossible

Movie Poster Bags - Ecoist Recycled Billboard Totes (GALLERY)            Movie Poster Bags - Ecoist Recycled Billboard Totes (GALLERY)

How will you be reducing the carbon footprint of your next marketing campaign?

Posted in General, Inspiration, Media creativity, Pioneering, Trends |

One Response

  1. Beat Richert

    The bags made me immediately think about Freitag, a small company based in Zurich Switzerland who originated the idea of unique bags made of recycled material. To live their environmentally friendly approach to the max, even their flagship shop in Zurich is 100% recycled - a tower made of abandoned 20 containers: http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/09/freitag_recycle_1.php

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