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Washed Up

Oct 28, 2008

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By Mindy Charski


Washed Up

Photo by Matt Cobleigh

Discarded condoms, cigarette butts, and other rubbish wrapped up like the “catch of the day." These images deliver the jolt to a new pro-bono campaign intended to create awareness about litter and pollution on beaches. The ads were created for the Surfrider Foundation by Saatchi & Saatchi LA and shot by Matt Cobleigh.

“We wanted to do something to create awareness about the problem of pollution at beaches across the country,” says agency art director Juan Bobillo. “We thought, ‘Let’s try to get [viewers] in a place where they would never expect an environmental message to be there.’”

The effort is designed to attract new members – including those who aren’t regular beachgoers – to the nonprofit, which strives to protect the world’s oceans, waves and beaches. The print ads follow a stunt in which the Torrance, Calif.-based agency set up a booth at a farmers' market and surprised people by displaying packages of trash found on the shore.

The team collected the trash used displayed during the stunt and in the print campaign during a cleanup in nearby Redondo Beach. They then packaged some items together and gave the collections tasty names like “Styrofoam Bites” and “Private Beach Mix” that appear on realistic-looking food labels. Each tag also includes a short line explaining how the contents relate to environmental problems as well as a call to action.

Cobleigh, who is based in South Pasadena, Calif., has worked with the agency before. He has a “simple, clean style of photography,” Bobillo says, and the shop wanted the seven ads to look “very clinical, very clean, and well lit, as if it’s a beauty shot of a food tray.”

The impact of the images, Bobillo says, comes from the trash. “We don’t have to make that look any worse than it is,” he says. “If you shoot it beautifully, it will come across the way we want it to.”

The right lighting was key. Cobleigh needed to “get nice highlights here and there,” Bobillo says, adding that bad lighting on the plastic wrap could actually hide the contents. Minimal retouching was handled by Rocket Studio in Los Angeles.

The print work for the San Clemente, Calif.-based group broke in May and is scheduled to continue into 2009. The images have appeared as posters in the Los Angeles area and will run in publications including Fader, Fast Company, and Wired. Translated executions are also appearing abroad.

Washed Up

Oct 28, 2008

By Mindy Charski


pdn/photos/stylus/44106-Seafood-Print-Campaign_larg.jpg

Discarded condoms, cigarette butts, and other rubbish wrapped up like the “catch of the day." These images deliver the jolt to a new pro-bono campaign intended to create awareness about litter and pollution on beaches. The ads were created for the Surfrider Foundation by Saatchi & Saatchi LA and shot by Matt Cobleigh.

“We wanted to do something to create awareness about the problem of pollution at beaches across the country,” says agency art director Juan Bobillo. “We thought, ‘Let’s try to get [viewers] in a place where they would never expect an environmental message to be there.’”

The effort is designed to attract new members – including those who aren’t regular beachgoers – to the nonprofit, which strives to protect the world’s oceans, waves and beaches. The print ads follow a stunt in which the Torrance, Calif.-based agency set up a booth at a farmers' market and surprised people by displaying packages of trash found on the shore.

The team collected the trash used displayed during the stunt and in the print campaign during a cleanup in nearby Redondo Beach. They then packaged some items together and gave the collections tasty names like “Styrofoam Bites” and “Private Beach Mix” that appear on realistic-looking food labels. Each tag also includes a short line explaining how the contents relate to environmental problems as well as a call to action.

Cobleigh, who is based in South Pasadena, Calif., has worked with the agency before. He has a “simple, clean style of photography,” Bobillo says, and the shop wanted the seven ads to look “very clinical, very clean, and well lit, as if it’s a beauty shot of a food tray.”

The impact of the images, Bobillo says, comes from the trash. “We don’t have to make that look any worse than it is,” he says. “If you shoot it beautifully, it will come across the way we want it to.”

The right lighting was key. Cobleigh needed to “get nice highlights here and there,” Bobillo says, adding that bad lighting on the plastic wrap could actually hide the contents. Minimal retouching was handled by Rocket Studio in Los Angeles.

The print work for the San Clemente, Calif.-based group broke in May and is scheduled to continue into 2009. The images have appeared as posters in the Los Angeles area and will run in publications including Fader, Fast Company, and Wired. Translated executions are also appearing abroad.
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