Need to Know   08 : 02 : 18
Babor and All Woman Campaign, US

Need to Know
08 : 02 : 18

The Centre for Humane Technology opens to safeguard future generations, The Little One inspires interest in tea, the maternity market is blossoming.

1. Models bare all for Babor skincare campaign 2. Afound brings discount culture to Sweden 3. Centre for Humane Technology looks to negate harmful technology 4. The Little One treats patrons to tea and pastry pairings 5. The maternity market is a growth sector for retailers 6. Thought-starter: What’s all the fuss with Lady Doritos?

1. Models bare all for Babor skincare campaign

Babor and All Womxn Project campaign, US
Babor and All Woman Campaign, US
Babor and All Woman Campaign, US
Babor and All Woman Campaign, US

US – Luxury B2B skincare brand Babor has launched an awareness campaign in collaboration with All Woman Project (AWP), a non-profit-making organisation that pioneers unretouched images of women in photo and video campaigns.

The series of images promote the collaborative Beauty Ampoule Set, with half of the profits donated to AWP. The models include founders Charli Howard and Clémentine Desseaux, alongside activists, mothers and editors, all of whom are shown in skin-coloured underwear with minimal make-up to reinforce the message that ‘women do not need to be changed to be beautiful’.

‘Just as in life, women have more or less insecurities when it comes to their bodies. Some of them want to be more covered up, some of them don’t mind being totally bare. But overall, our models have very minimal make-up on,’ Desseaux tells LS:N Global. ‘[We] did not try to hide anything or change their natural beauty.’

In our Rethinking Bodycare microtrend, we examine how beauty brands are now using ad campaigns to celebrate the body in a way that was traditionally reserved for the face.

2. Afound brings discount culture to Sweden

Afound by H&M Afound by H&M
Afound by H&M Afound by H&M

Sweden – The H&M group is redefining the outlet store with the launch of its new brand Afound, which focuses on discount culture. Unusually, the space will amalgamate products from a curated selection of fashion brands, offering what it describes as a ‘style- and deal-hunting paradise’.

‘Afound cares about both the value of the products and the mix,’ says Fredrik Svartling, managing director of the company. ‘And by offering personal style inspiration, quality labels and the sense that you’re getting a really good deal, Afound will offer a new form of off-price experience.’ Afound is tapping into the growing desire among consumers to spend less on fashion items while not compromising on quality.

3. Centre for Humane Technology looks to negate harmful technology

US – Tristan Harris, former Google design ethicist and Roger McNamee, a former Facebook investor and adviser, are just some of the names behind the launch of The Centre for Human Technology, an organisation that has been established to help mitigate the negative effects of new technologies.

The centre has worked with Common Sense, an advocacy organisation for children in the digital age, to create an ad campaign, The Truth About Tech, that will be presented at 55,000 public schools across the US.

As people become more aware of the impact that online behaviour is having on society at large, the organisation wants to encourage brands to more carefully consider the long-term implications of their products on mental wellbeing.

In our forthcoming Morality Recoded macrotrend we will explore the growing movement among big brands to acknowledge past moral discrepencies and seek redemption. Book here for our annual Trend Briefing, where this and other long-term macrotrends will be unveiled.

Centre for Humane Technology

4. The Little One treats patrons to tea and pastry pairings

The Little One
The Little One, New York
The Little One
The Little One by KoKo Architecture + Design

New York – Founded by pastry chefs Olivia Leung and Eddie Zheng, The Little One is a new small-scale confectionery spot in New York’s Chinatown. The nine-item menu has been designed around wagashi, traditional Japanese desserts typically served with tea. The experience has been designed to encourage diners to consume the tea-flavoured sweets accompanied by teas such as matcha and hojicha, a Japanese green tea.

While there are a plethora of new Asian-inspired dessert rooms in New York, The Little Ones pairing of confectionery with tea will help to inspire interest in the Tea Market, which has often faded into the background in recent times as coffee culture dominates.

5. The maternity market is a growth sector for retailers

As explored in our Parenting Market, starting a family nowadays is no longer about relinquishing individuality in order to assume the role of parent, leading to the demise of traditional maternity specialists like Mothercare. The maternity market in general is, however, thriving, with brands such as Hatch offering more sophisticated products that recognise that expectant mothers want products that reflect who they were pre-pregnancy.

6. Thought-starter: What’s all the fuss with Lady Doritos?

With the fallout over speculation that PepsiCo was launching Lady Doritos, Foresight editor Daniela Walker explores why gendered products are not necessarily the root of the problem.

Last week, PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi fanned speculation when she mentioned on a Freaknomics podcast that the brand was considering making crisps more amenable to female snackers. Nooyi lamented that women ‘don’t like to crunch too loudly in public. And they don’t lick their fingers generously and they don’t like to pour the little broken pieces, and the flavour, into their mouths.’

From PepsiCo’s point of view, it is merely meeting a consumer demand – its focus groups revealed that women don’t like to be seen eating loudly in public.

The problem with Lady Doritos is not necessarily that it is a gendered product, but the fact that it feeds into a society that continues to segment women based on sexist presumptions. PepsiCo admits that while they are not necessarily launching explicitly female crisps, they are exploring avenues that will ‘engage’ consumers in new ways. Does this mean a less crunchy, dusty crisp? One that just happens to appeal to the fairer sex?

Read the full opinion here.

Muk Bang with Jessica Stam for Vogue Korea
Discover More News
Industry insights from the Walpole British Luxury Summit 2025

News

Industry insights from the Walpole British Luxury Summit 2025

The Walpole British Luxury Summit 2025 gathered leaders from across the global luxury sector for a day of expert talks, reports and panel discussio...
Luxury : Global Events : Walpole British Luxury Summit
Foresight Friday: Fiona Harkin, director of foresight

News

Foresight Friday: Fiona Harkin, director of foresight

Every Friday, we offer an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, director of foresigh...
Foresight : Foresight Friday : Ff
Stat: Connected tech boosts loyalty as consumers seek smarter brand interactions

News

Stat: Connected tech boosts loyalty as consumers seek smarter brand interactions

More than a quarter of consumers are willing to pay more for a product that offers a connected experience such as a QR code, visual search, AR or N...
Stats : Stat : Technology
World Retail Congress 2025 daily recap: Emerging consumer mindsets and luxury storefronts

News

World Retail Congress 2025 daily recap: Emerging consumer mindsets and luxury storefronts

On the closing day of World Retail Congress 2025, retailers looked to the future, examining emerging consumer mindsets, sustainability pressur...
Luxury : Retail : World Retail Congress
Pinterest rolls out enhanced AI-powered visual search tools

News

Pinterest rolls out enhanced AI-powered visual search tools

Pinterest has launched a suite of generative AI-powered visual search features for women’s fashion content in the US, the UK and Canada.
Pinterest : Artificial Intelligence : Search Tool
Stat: Teens balance connection and concern in the age of social media

News

Stat: Teens balance connection and concern in the age of social media

Nearly half of US teenagers (48%) now say social media negatively affects people their age, a sharp rise from 32% in 2022, according to a report fr...
Stats : Stat : Teens And Tech
World Retail Congress 2025: Why trust is retail’s strongest currency

News

World Retail Congress 2025: Why trust is retail’s strongest currency

The first day of World Retail Congress 2025 in London revolved around the theme Faster, Bolder, Smarter.
Retail : Global Events : World Retail Congress
Hawaii introduces climate-driven tourist tax

News

Hawaii introduces climate-driven tourist tax

Hawaii is making climate history with a landmark bill that raises tourist taxes to fund environmental protection and climate resilience projects.
Travel : Sustainability : Travel & Hospitality
Stat: Gen Z turn to daily supplements as wellness becomes an everyday routine

News

Stat: Gen Z turn to daily supplements as wellness becomes an everyday routine

According to the latest Gen Z State of Beauty 2024/2025 report from Kyra, 80% of Gen Z in the UK and the US now take between one and six supplement...
Stat : Wellness : Supplements
Dutch Pavilion re-imagines the sports bar at Venice Architecture Biennale

News

Dutch Pavilion re-imagines the sports bar at Venice Architecture Biennale

Curated by Amanda Pinatih and designed by Gabriel Fontana, Sidelined re-imagines the traditional sports bar as a welcoming, non-binary social space.
The Netherlands : Venice Architecture Biennale : Design
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN