Clever Ads: Donate Blood (5 total)
Using funny imagery with some funky font, ad agency Y&R, So Paulo, Brazil worked with Santa Casa Hospital to make these clever ads about donating blood. The tagline? Don't waste your blood. Donate. Awesome.
Using funny imagery with some funky font, ad agency Y&R, So Paulo, Brazil worked with Santa Casa Hospital to make these clever ads about donating blood. The tagline? Don't waste your blood. Donate. Awesome.
“Gain a deeper perspective with the New Straights Times,” says the tagline for this campaign by ad agency McCann Erickson.
This bright green toy solider costume is totally awesome!
Fashion photographer Mario Sorrenti sets the mood with dim lighting as he shoots Russian model Natalia Vodianova for W Magazine. Natalia looks absolutely stunning in her scantically clad lace lingerie, while striking provocative poses.
The entrance to Wikileaks' Secret Headquarters.
Glass Artist David DiMichele asks you to fully immerse yourself in his mind-shattering miniature scenes.
Fukuoka, Japan-born artist Nobuhiro Nakanishi has created a mesmerizing series called Layered Drawings that we'd love to see in person. Nakanishi uses a laser print to mount his photos onto plexiglass acrylic. Though we could enjoy each slice on its own, taken together, they produce a magnificent effect. “The theme of my work is: the physical that permeates into the art piece,” he says.
Artist Mathilde Roussel-Giraudy asks you to reflect on the loss of a loved one with her creative sculpture series Empreinte.
Don't call Pierre Beteille an artist or photographer. Why? Because he doesn't believe he's either one of those things.
Brody S. is at it again, confusing people at San Francisco's 2010 Santacon with her Desaturated Santa costume. At first glance, it's easy to assume that these images were photoshopped. Amazingly, they were not. To create the illusion, Brody wears a custom black-and-white Santa Claus costume, a grey wig, contacts, and Kryolan body paint.
It's hard not to be completely mesmerized by Neil Krug's '50s-'70s style photography.
Street artist Michael Aaron Williams purposely puts up his homeless street people in places where others will find them.