Daily Signals 05.09.2019

Signals

Timberland PRO puts its original audience in the spotlight, Apple launches an approved repairs service, and emojis are elevating human intimacy.

Cubitts crafts glasses from everyday waste

Cubitts, UK Cubitts, UK
Cubitts, UK Cubitts, UK

London – The spectacles company is experimenting with sustainable materials, using human hair, potatoes and yoghurt pots for a new collection of frames.

The Redux concept range by Cubitts comprises 10 one-off styles made with different waste materials. Although the brand typically makes its frames from cellulose acetate – a semi-synthetic plastic derived from tree pulp and cotton – it notes that its manufacturing process still has an impact on the environment.

According to the brand, the upcycled materials – which include corn husks, human hair donated by Cubitts staff and their friends and turned into a bio-resin, and old CDs – offers the same versatility as cellulose acetate. In addition, each material results in a distinctive colour scheme and texture. Although the designs are prototypes, the brand hopes these alternative materials can be developed to produce its commercial frames.

As explored in our Material Far Futures report, innovators such as Cubitts are using design to transform environmental excess into valuable new resources for the manufacturing industry.

Timberland PRO applauds America’s trade workers

Timberland Pro, Always Do, Never Done. Campaign by The Martin Agency, US

US – The footwear and apparel brand's latest campaign pays tribute to its original customer base of American trade workers and builders.

Highlighting the contributions that these workers make to communities across the US, the campaign includes a new tv ad that will run across tv, video platforms and social media. The ad, Rebuild, shows a construction worker rebuilding a home following a fire. While trade workers are essential to the US economy, projections estimate that more than 2.4m manufacturing jobs will be unfilled by 2028 (source: Deloitte).

To address this growing skills shortage, Timberland PRO has launched a supporting online resource for people who are interested in learning about careers in the building trade. ‘Our goal with the campaign is to ensure that we continue to shine a light on the skilled trade workers who are rebuilding our communities and celebrating them as heroes,’ explains Cassie Heppner, Timberland PRO director of marketing.

In the US, brands must learn to speak to the blue collar demographic, which has felt left behind by the rise of coastal elitism. For more, read our macrotrend, The American Middle.

Apple rolls out approved repairs programme

California – The technology company will soon let independent businesses perform the most common out-of-warranty iPhone repairs.

Providing an additional option for iPhone owners, the programme will mean wider repair businesses – large or small – can access genuine Apple parts, tools, training, repair manuals and diagnostics as Apple’s Authorized Service Providers (AASPs). The programme will be launched in the US and there are plans to expand to other countries. To qualify for the new programme, businesses simply need to have an Apple-certified technician who can perform the repairs.

‘To better meet our customers’ needs, we’re making it easier for independent providers across the US to tap into the same resources as our Apple Authorized Service Provider network,’ says Jeff Williams, Apple’s chief operating officer. ‘When a repair is needed, a customer should have confidence the repair is done right.’

This move into approved repairs signals how the culture of newness perpetuated by technology giants is beginning to be disrupted.

Fairphone

Stat: Emojis are altering how we communicate desire

Those who often use emojis in messages reportedly have more sex because they are better at communicating desire, according to a study by the Kinsey Institute.

The researchers found that 30% of participants in a study of 5,300 singles in the US used emojis regularly with people they were dating, with most claiming that they did so because visuals allow for better self-expression.

The researchers state that modern singles who use more emojis were more likely to secure subsequent dates and have a potential future with that person. ‘Those who used emojis more with potential partners prior to the first date were more likely to have engaged in intimate behaviour with that person, and were more likely to have established a relationship with this person,’ the researchers concluded.

With visual symbols such as emojis enabling us to communicate our emotions in alternative ways, they are helping to break down the emotional barriers that might have previously existed. For more on the effects of visual culture on consumers, read our macrotrend Gen Viz.

Previous Daily Signals Articles
Rimowa turns luggage into a living archive

Daily Signals

Rimowa turns luggage into a living archive

Luxury luggage brand Rimowa has launched For a Lifetime of Lives, a new campaign developed with creative agency GUT that positions its aluminium su...
Travel : Fashion : Advertising
Ras Al Khaimah launches UAE’s first commercial astronaut training tourism experience

Daily Signals

Ras Al Khaimah launches UAE’s first commercial astronaut training tourism experience

Ras Al Khaimah is set to introduce the UAE’s first commercial astronaut training experience through a partnership between Action Flight Aviation an...
Travel : Space : Tourism
Stat: UK confidence gap emerges on personal finance and investment

Daily Signals

Stat: UK confidence gap emerges on personal finance and investment

Fewer than half of people in the UK describe themselves as confident investors, revealing a persistent confidence gap around personal finance and l...
Finance : Investment : Statistic
Café Bustelo turns coffee cans into game day tattoo kits

Daily Signals

Café Bustelo turns coffee cans into game day tattoo kits

Latin-inspired coffee brand Café Bustelo has launched Game Face, a limited-edition campaign celebrating sport, national pride and self-expression.
Fandom : Sport : Design
Miista and Lost Property highlight the rise of Modern Salons

Daily Signals

Miista and Lost Property highlight the rise of Modern Salons

In London, footwear brand Miista has partnered with lecture series Lost Property to host an evening of presentations exploring the theme of The Sil...
Fashion : Live Events : Society
Stat: Confidence in university degrees hits record low as value debate deepens

Daily Signals

Stat: Confidence in university degrees hits record low as value debate deepens

An inquiry into England’s student loan system begins on Tuesday (2 June) amid rising doubts over the value of university degrees, as a new British ...
Education : University : Value
Casetify and Tamagotchi bring the Kidult Craze to tech accessories

Daily Signals

Casetify and Tamagotchi bring the Kidult Craze to tech accessories

Casetify has partnered with Tamagotchi on a global accessories collection that repositions the nostalgic digital pet as both a collectible and a li...
Technology : Nostalgia : Kidult
Audible re-imagines retail as immersive audio discovery space

Daily Signals

Audible re-imagines retail as immersive audio discovery space

Audible has opened Audible Story House, a permanent public space in New York dedicated to audio storytelling.
Music : Sound : Audio Books
Stat: Americans report decline in everyday fun

Daily Signals

Stat: Americans report decline in everyday fun

Nearly half (48%) of Americans feel their lives lack fun, according to a new survey of 5,000 adults conducted by Talker Research and commissioned b...
Wellbeing : Fun : Statistic
Diesel and Tinder champion LGBTQIA+ visibility in Pride campaign

Daily Signals

Diesel and Tinder champion LGBTQIA+ visibility in Pride campaign

Fashion brand Diesel and dating app Tinder have partnered on For Successful Loving, a Pride 2026 campaign and capsule collection championing LGBTQI...
Fashion : Branding : Marketing
You have 2 free Daily Signals remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN