Daily Signals 22.01.2020

Signals

Skincare for men of colour, ThredUp helps consumers understand their fashion footprint and the debilitating effects of home rental.

All the fun of Blackpool’s first museum

Showtown Blackpool

Blackpool – Showtown, the British seaside town’s first museum, will celebrate its history and future in delivering joy and whimsy to visitors.

Set to open in 2021, the museum will celebrate the comedians, dancers, circuses and characters that have brought Blackpool to life throughout its history. The project aims to be a hybrid museum space and visitor attraction – a fully immersive, family-friendly experience featuring artefacts and visitor experiences. Among the exhibitions planned for the museum are Beside the Seaside, which will explore Britons’ love for the beach, and Everybody Dance Now, a celebration of the town as the spiritual home of ballroom dancing.

To build intrigue around Showtown, Manchester-based studio True North has created playful, flexible branding for the museum that draws on beach-inspired motifs such as ice creams. In a similar vein, museum spaces are also being uplifted to transform novel experiences into platforms for people and brands to engage in discussions about the future. We explore this in our Post-modern Museums microtrend.

Bevel creates total skincare for black men

Bevel Bevel
Bevel Bevel

US – Bevel is becoming a one-stop grooming emporium for black men, adding skincare and haircare products to its existing shaving range.

The company has released 11 new products across two new categories with the development of Bevel Hair and Bevel Body. Aiming to be the go-to brand for men's head-to-toe grooming, Bevel has expanded its range with the aim of increasing its presence in bricks-and-mortar stores.

Launched in early 2019, the company specialises in products specifically designed for coarser, curly hair and black skin, which are often ignored by the grooming industry. In a bid to be a breath of fresh air in the men’s grooming sector, its expanded range includes a deodorant created to penetrate through thick hair and a beard softener that detangles and nourishes.

Recognising the importance of inclusivity, brands such as Bevel and Ceylon are innovating with products that cater for men of colour’s specific skincare and haircare needs.

ThredUp calculates shoppers’ fashion footprint

Global – ThredUp has introduced a fashion footprint calculator in collaboration with Green Story to raise awareness of people’s personal impact on environmental damage.

The tool allows consumers to find out more about their individual fashion consumption behaviour by answering a simple set of questions. Designed to identify buying, cleaning and clothing recycling habits, the interactive platform considers factors such as how often clothes are purchased online versus in-store, as well as the use of tumble dryers and dry cleaning services.

Users’ resulting fashion carbon footprint is then compared against the national US average of 1,620 pounds of carbon per year, with ThredUp providing tips to encourage people to make better decisions when it comes to fashion purchases and maintenance.

While consumers often opt for convenience over eco-consciousness, new services are emerging to help people seamlessly integrate sustainable fashion choices into their busy lifestyles. Explore more case studies in our Fast (conscious) Fashion microtrend.

ThredUp Fashion Footprint Calculator

Stat: Home renting is making UK consumers sick

A study released by the housing charity Shelter together with YouGov reveals UK renters are facing dramatic – and often negative – health impacts due to worries about renting.

With factors including financial stress, poor living conditions and the threat of eviction laying heavily on the minds of UK tenants, Shelter's reveals that 45% of private renters – about 3.8m adults – have experienced stress and anxiety as a direct result of housing concerns. Andrea Deakin, Shelter's emergency helpline manager, notes: ‘This time of year [winter] can be especially stressful and difficult for families who are struggling to cope with big rent bills or things like cold and mouldy homes.’

With consumers increasingly aware of the importance of financial wellness, there is an opportunity for housing developers as well as financial brands to step in and provide services and advice for those in need.

Previous Daily Signals Articles
The Trend: Human by Design

Daily Signals

The Trend: Human by Design

LS:N Global’s coverage of design in 2025 explored humanising design and branding in the age of elasticity.
Design : Creativity : Branding
The Big Idea: Branding in the Age of Elasticity

Daily Signals

The Big Idea: Branding in the Age of Elasticity

LS:N Global’s coverage of design in 2025 explored humanising design and branding in the age of elasticity.
Design
The Campaign: New Forest’s rebranding turns tourists into custodians

Daily Signals

The Campaign: New Forest’s rebranding turns tourists into custodians

LS:N Global’s coverage of design in 2025 explored humanising design and branding in the age of elasticity. 
Design
The Viewpoint: Rehumanising 3D Design

Daily Signals

The Viewpoint: Rehumanising 3D Design

LS:N Global’s coverage of design in 2025 explored humanising design and branding in the age of elasticity. 
Design
The Space: Glossier unveils immersive experience for Fleur fragrance launch in Paris

Daily Signals

The Space: Glossier unveils immersive experience for Fleur fragrance launch in Paris

LS:N Global’s coverage of design in 2025 explored humanising design and branding in the age of elasticity.
Design
The Trend: The Great Beauty Blur

Daily Signals

The Trend: The Great Beauty Blur

2025 marks a critical inflection point for beauty. The sector, once defined by diversity and creativity, has grown increasingly monotonous, as glob...
Beauty : Wellness : Identity
The Big Idea: Neo-community Market

Daily Signals

The Big Idea: Neo-community Market

Brands are redefining engagement by transforming followers into communities where belonging is the ultimate currency.
Beauty : Engagement : Community
The Campaign: The Ordinary exposes beauty industry buzzwords in dystopian new video

Daily Signals

The Campaign: The Ordinary exposes beauty industry buzzwords in dystopian new video

In a provocative campaign in October 2025, skincare brand The Ordinary called out the beauty industry’s reliance on pseudo-scientific language.
Beauty : Skincare : Cosmetics
The Viewpoint: Reframing Ageing

Daily Signals

The Viewpoint: Reframing Ageing

Jacynth Bassett, founder and CEO of Ageism Is Never In Style, is reshaping the conversation around ageing, positioning it as a privilege rather tha...
Beauty : Marketing : Ageing
The Space: Koyia perfumery asks customers to pay with time rather than money

Daily Signals

The Space: Koyia perfumery asks customers to pay with time rather than money

In September 2025, Swedish fragrance brand Koyia introduced a forest-based retail concept where the only currency is time.
Beauty : Retail : Fragrance
You have 0 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN