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March 22, 2010
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March 1, 2006 New Year, New You With the dawn of each new year, there is a tendency to look back on the year that was and reflect on its outcome. Was it positive or negative? Was it chaos or charisma? What lessons were learned, and what habits should be tossed like yesterday’s garbage? We typically ask these questions in an attempt to redirect our individual lives. But a new trend is emerging, one in which these questions are being approached from a global perspective. If in the past 12 months you have checked out bamboo flooring, googled a corrupt politician, or attended a Live 8 concert, you may be part of a growing consumer shift. Tired of the disastrous wake left by Mother Nature, wayward politicians, and no-fault corporations, some consumers are (quietly, individually) beginning a revolt for positive change. With more consumers joining daily, the movement grows faster and faster, from a gentle street hum to an all out blasting of horns. The message is clear: the whole is not greater than the sum of its parts. It’s not OK to pretend that the actions of the individual do not affect the group. Enron taught us that. Hurricane Katrina taught us that. Change for all begins with the change of a few. We are all connected. Would the new consumer please stand up? Steven R. Covey, author of the 1989 bestseller The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, calls this connection interdependence. As consumers begin to recognize this, their consumption of goods & services is shifting accordingly. Behold the Conscious Consumer. The new awareness, fear, and respect of our interdependence with each other and with our environments has led to a measurable new direction in consumer spending and consumer power. Considering a new car? Buy a hybrid. Picking up groceries on your way home? Choose organic. It’s election time? Vote or die. Already, there are a handful of companies joining the revolution. Participant Productions, the company behind politically charged blockbusters like Syriana and North Country, believes strongly in using “the power of media to create great social change”. Oprah Winfrey, an obvious leader in advocating positive change, recently used her television show to successfully encourage viewers to write their congressmen and women and demand stronger laws against human trafficking. CompostModern, created by the American Institute of Graphic Arts and the Industrial Designers Society of America, is a conference designed to educate and encourage designers to be leaders in developing socially responsible products. At Voice of Color, we are honored to ring in 2006 with a design story that pays tribute to the balance of our collective lives and the environments between them. PRANA embodies this respect for our interdependence. Prana, by design
The Sanskrit word “prana” literally means “before breath” and is considered the life force of all things. In theory, it suggests that all living things are connected and inter-reliant; a change in one element will be reflected across many. The PRANA story is one of replenishment and spirit. It honors the balance between design elements by selecting products and accessories that seem to speak to each other. Like a melody, the form of one piece rolls into the next. Prana, the palette The PRANA color palette is created from two beautifully arranged harmonies: Pashmina and Horizon. Whitewashed and water-colored to instill calm and tranquility, the palette mimics the soothing effects of nature. Each harmony embodies a distinct sense of serenity, designed to replenish the peace that is too often damaged by our increasingly stressful world.
Posted by: Renée Labbé www.creativesearchunit.com |
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