
The above advertising for SEALIFE London Aquarium was done using their Sea Tagging technique.
It's a simple idea but all the best ones are. According to head of marketing, Peter Kerwood, it cost millions to make the SEALIFE London Aquarium a world-class attraction, while London-based CURB used little more than saltwater and a stencil to market it. "Sea Tagging" as it's called, is as simple as that. Guerilla teams dress in scuba gear created an aquatic sprawl across London, spraying more than two-thousand sea animals on buildings and sidewalks, creating an experiential marketing campaign totally relevant to the Aquarium.
The beauty of this technique is that the salinity of sea water makes it more resistant to evaporation than freshwater meaning they can last for up to hours, and after that you're left with a dusting of sea salt. CURB is the same company that pioneered turf cutting and snow tagging, and the logistical beauty of zero impact campaigns like these: no permits.
The CURB site has loads of great examples of their eco-advertising. I love the simplicity of the "clean" graffiti but the crop circles are out of this World!!!
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