Honey Harvest
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Ed Shek - February 8, 2012 @ 6:12 pm
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COLORlovers has the launch of their new design content marketplace, Creativemarket.com coming soon, and they wanted to aide in the celebration of their new content marketplace by taking a fun look at the most popular design elements in movie posters from 2011. Marketers know that one of the aspects of getting people to the theaters are carefully and creatively designed marketing materials for the movies they want us to see. The designers behind the marketing materials know they need to catch our eye and lure us into seeing their film, but as with every Hollywood movie, the real success of a blockbuster movie will ultimately be determined by the quality of the film itself.
On a billboard, in your Netflix queue or on the rack at your local movie store…The posters for movies are often the first thing to catch your eye and they’re designed to make you want to see the movie. Let’s take a look at what designs sold best in 2011.
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Samsung has made one thing clear in its “Next Big Thing” Super Bowl spot — it wants to be the anti-Apple.
The South Korean electronics maker is marketing it’s 5.3-inch smartphone with stylus as the latest player in the world of connected devices.
The ad — as we already new from its teaser released last week — pokes fun at Apple fanboys and fangirls who notoriously camp out in anticipation for iDevice launches.
The towns of San Francisco, Calif, Boston, Ma. and Denver, Co., erupt in non-choreographed flash mobs, when they meet “The Thing Called Love,” the Samsung Galaxy Note.
The phone, which some Mashable editors got their hands on at CES, feels too big to be a phone, measuring over half the length of the iPad.
The Galaxy Note did not have a lot of tech company during the 2012 Super Bowl, as the majority of the ads were, as usual, for beer and cars. Perhaps Samsung will gain something as one of the limited technology advertisers during the game.
Would you want a stylus for your smartphone? Do you think a 5.3-inch screen is too big? Let us know what you think of Samsung’s Super Bowl spot.
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