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Showing posts from April, 2014

30 Of The Most Creative Shopping Bag Designs Ever

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When selling a product, its design is one of the most important aspects of its marketability. However, just as important, if not more so, is making sure that your product and your consumers’ shopping experience is memorable – and one excellent way to do this is with brilliantly designed shopping bags like these. Maybe there’s nothing wrong with the common “Thank You, Come Again” plastic bag, but it won’t make you stand out from a crowd. With ingenious bags like these, not only will your customers remember their shopping experience, the people that spot their shopping bags in the street will also be intrigued. Or, if you don’t feel the need to make an impression, those bags can be offered as creative advertisement space to other brands. In fact, there’s already a term coined for that – it’s called “bagvertising.” Other bags from this list are reusable, so whether they have a brand advertisement or simply a cool and clever design, they are a lot more fun to carry arou

Ce britannique marche le jour et la nuit dans la neige !

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Simon Beck n’est pas Forrest Gump. Et pourtant il marche. Tout le temps. Encore et encore. Dans la neige, qu’il fasse jour, nuit, chaud ou froid. On pourrait croire qu’il est fou… mais non. En fait Mr. beck est un artiste anglais qui réalise des formes magnifiques dans la neige avec pour seul outil… ses pieds. Il est en forme : il peut marcher pendant 10 heures de suite dans les Alpes françaises jusqu’à ce que son « crop circle » blanc soit parfait.

Tectonic Boundary Between the North American and Eurasian Plates

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Located in the Þingvallavatn Lake in the Þingvellir National Park in Iceland, Silfra is crevice between the North American and Eurasian plates. The geology of Silfra and the Þingvellir valley are connected to the tectonic drift of the Eurasian and the North American plates. Every year, the plates drift about 2 cm apart, which builds up tension between the plates and the earth mass above. This tension is released through a major earthquake approximately every ten years. In these earthquakes, cracks and fissures are formed in Þingvellir. Silfra is one of the largest cracks and started with a deep cave where most of the underwater wells nourish it. Silfra, by virtue of its location in the Þingvallavatn Lake, contains clear, cold water that attracts scuba divers drawn to its high visibility and geological importance; divers are literally swimming between continents. Swimming through an area of extreme natural beauty, divers surveys the underwater canyons on their either