Highly re-appropriate: Droog innovates a new way to develop product

Highly re-appropriate: Droog innovates a new way to develop product

Highly re-appropriate: Droog innovates a new way to develop product

Milan – It was a long taxi ride to ‘saved by droog’, the installation from the eponymous Dutch design company. In the mêlée of Milan’s meetings, launches and lunches, many journalists did not find time to see it. LS:N Global did.

Downstairs, past posters heralding the just-photographed new owners of some of the collection, was a minimal warehouse space that showcased Droog’s inspired collection of recycled and re-appropriated products.

As described in a previous Seed, Droog bought 5,135 items at auctions of goods from failed businesses. The items were given to 14 designers, including Jurgen Bey, Marian Bantjes and Marije Vogelzang, to create 19 new products.

‘We’ve started to rethink our whole idea of product development,’ explains founder Renny Ramakers.

The result was a whimsical collection. ‘Beware of software vest’ by Mieke Gerritzen, with text by Geert Lovink, gave standard orange visibility vests a makeover. ‘100 blue containers’ are – and we hope you’ve seen this coming – 100 containers, but flocked in Yves Klein blue for a Droog twist. On 1,000 reclaimed handkerchiefs, Studio Makkink & Bey printed selected articles from 30 days of news. Visitors could buy the handkerchiefs in three ways: with the drawing only; with the drawing crocheted by hand for an hour by a craftsperson sitting in the warehouse nearby; or with the drawing hand-crocheted for two hours. The prices, €35, €65 and €95, reflected the amount of craft each version took to make.

Droog’s installation focused on a product’s entire lifecycle. LS:N Global thinks this represents a highly appropriate response to the resource scarcity challenges facing consumer society, as described in our seminal report on the decade, the Turbulent Teens.

We will be reporting on Droog’s innovative attitude to product development and its stance on product lifecycle – which reflects the cradle-to-cradle concept advanced by Michael Braungart – in the next month.

100 blue containers by Droog, Saved by droog, Milan 100 blue containers by Droog, Saved by droog, Milan
Beware of software vest, Saved by droog Beware of software vest, Saved by droog
Happy wallet by Stefan Sagmeister, Saved by droog, Milan Happy wallet by Stefan Sagmeister, Saved by droog, Milan
Manicured chair by Marian Bantjes, Saved by droog, Milanjpg Manicured chair by Marian Bantjes, Saved by droog, Milanjpg
Three stars bomb by Atelier Ted Noten, Saved by droog, Milan Three stars bomb by Atelier Ted Noten, Saved by droog, Milan
Discover More Daily Signals
Why Apple is leaning into artisanal charm for 2025 festive push

Daily Signals

Why Apple is leaning into artisanal charm for 2025 festive push

Apple’s 2025 Christmas campaign, A Critter Carol, puts human craftsmanship front and centre.
Technology : Advertising : Design
ISPO 2025: Innovation, inclusion and community drive sport’s next chapter

Daily Signals

ISPO 2025: Innovation, inclusion and community drive sport’s next chapter

At ISPO 2025 in Munich, talks, panels, activations and events spanned the full value chain of sport – from materials and manufacturing to brands an...
Global Events : Sport : Community
Stat: Young Americans drive growth across emerging social media platforms

Daily Signals

Stat: Young Americans drive growth across emerging social media platforms

A new Pew Research Center survey shows that while YouTube and Facebook continue to dominate the US social media landscape, younger u...
YouTube : Social Media : Facebook
Why smartphone-free is becoming a Christmas gift rule for kids

Daily Signals

Why smartphone-free is becoming a Christmas gift rule for kids

UK grassroots organisation Smartphone Free Childhood has launched a nationwide Christmas campaign urging parents to delay giving smartphones to the...
Advertising : Technology : Youth
Adolescence extends to early 30s, new five-stage brain map reveals

Daily Signals

Adolescence extends to early 30s, new five-stage brain map reveals

New research mapping how the brain’s wiring shifts across life suggests adolescence doesn’t end until around age 32.
Generations : Adolescence : Life Stages
Stat: Security concerns push UK shoppers to abandon digital transactions

Daily Signals

Stat: Security concerns push UK shoppers to abandon digital transactions

Security concerns are now the biggest barrier to completing online purchases, with more than 50% of UK shoppers having abandoned a transaction due ...
Retail : Technology : Security
Why Foam photography institute’s new brand identity is motion-focused

Daily Signals

Why Foam photography institute’s new brand identity is motion-focused

The 25-year-old photography institution Foam has unveiled a new visual identity by Wieden+Kennedy Amsterdam, marking the first time it has used a b...
Design : Museum : Branding
How Letterboxd’s Video Store counters subscription fatigue

Daily Signals

How Letterboxd’s Video Store counters subscription fatigue

Letterboxd has unveiled the Letterboxd Video Store, an in-app rental feature launching in early December that pushes the platform beyond film loggi...
Media : Entertainment : Rental Model
Stat: UK retail workers experience uptick in abusive behaviour from the public

Daily Signals

Stat: UK retail workers experience uptick in abusive behaviour from the public

The Retail Trust has unveiled billboards at key London sites as part of its Let’s Respect Retail campaign.
Retail : Workplace : Statistic
Football Manager and Sky Sports turn female gamers into real-life football coaches to close gender gap

Daily Signals

Football Manager and Sky Sports turn female gamers into real-life football coaches to close gender gap

Xbox, Sky Sports and Football Manager have launched Missing Managers, a campaign created with McCann London that turns gaming into a real-world coa...
Sport : Gaming : Technology
You have 1 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN