Monday 27 September 2010

Diesel, London


My sincerest apologies to the window cleaners at Diesel along Bond St. here in London.  I seemed to have smeared the front windows with my saliva while drooling at this latest installation.  If you happen to be here in town this week then you must check out this latest scheme based on "THE CHASE [which] is a short film directed by Will Davidson and commissioned by AnOther Magazine to debut Sophia Kokosalaki's DIESEL BLACK GOLD AW10 collection".  (you can find a copy of the short film either on YouTube or on Diesel's site) This really is an incredibly exciting development in store concepts and presentation which is absolutely the direction we need to be in.  It is creative, informed, exciting, avant-garde and so incredibly interesting.  I need to go back and have another look as my images don't do this scheme justice.  Thank you so much Diesel, this is so refreshing I couldnt wait to share it with everyone here.  In the meantime, I promise not to stand so close to these windows next time.


Dorothy Perkins, London


I strangely feel like I am a 14 year old again today and holding Granny to ransom with a plastic gun, but really meaning it. Although she's not holding a copy of today's newspaper just these photographs. If you happened to be around Bond st. recently here in London, you may have seen the latest scheme from Dorothy Perkins (as of 12th September 2010 although discount posters have also now been hung in their windows ).  I seem to be covering so many look-a-like schemes recently and as lookie likee schemes go, this is one hell of a corker.  In Summer 2009, the value retailer, Splash (think Primark Prices, New Look fashionability)  based in Dubai, UAE, installed a scheme (two of the images sent to me can be seen below although I have quite a few other views of the scheme too) using out sized 'Polaroids' suspended from ropes with clips.  Just 12 months later Dorothy Perkins here in London (and no doubt a version of this went around all of the branches) launched a scheme of out sized 'Polaroids' clipped and suspended from a wire.  Purely innocent coincidence? a scheme 'influenced' by Splash? or completely shameless plagiarism? I know what I think but will let you decide. Having worked for many years with the umbrella company myself, I do feel that, at least, from my frame of reference, the latter probably applies - I may be wrong (yeah right) but I just cant convince myself enough to believe this is coincidence, and I bet you cant either?.  Who would have thought that Dorothy Perkins would ever be (hypothetically) well and truly busted and exposed for reproducing a scheme first seen in a value retailer?  Its a bit like Prada stealing concepts from New Look - OK not quite.  We are savvy enough to know it wouldn't happen but if it did we would wonder why, right? Wouldn't it be quite desperate?  I've always felt DP's (as they're known in the biz.) was the kind of granny-ish brand that catered for suburban housewives married to guys (possibly called Brian or Ralph) who work as telephone sanitisers or  sell air conditioning units and who bore their wives stupid with the In's and outs of the benefits of compressor fans rather than the ageing Topshop thirty somethings that I think its actually aimed at? But that's just me.  Ultimately, this is quite painful-buttock-clenching-toe-curling-stuff, pretty shameful and shameless behaviour.  If they had asked me I could have told them it has been done before - but they didn't, although I suspect and from my experience that they already knew anyway.  In the meantime, stick 'em up Granny-ish brand you are so busted.

Splash Images, Courtesy and Copyright John Paul Cairney & Jensen Galiza



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