Recycling of waste material in Visual
Merchandising
Pradeep John
Kerketta, Associate Faculty, FDDI

Visual merchandising is the
presentation of a store area and its merchandise in such a way that it will
attract the attention of potential customers who can buy their merchandise
products. It involves decorating the store keeping the interior presentation
the same as what is promised on the outside.
It enables in converting a walk by shopper into a
walk-in customer. Visual merchandising requires a combination of skills including
creativity, artistic knowledge and understanding of store design. Colors are a
big attraction point in converting potential shoppers into customers.
Visual
merchandising refers to anything that can be seen by the customer inside and
outside of a big Retail Store (Shoppers
Stop Ltd (SSL), Future Retail Ltd, Aditya Birla Retail Ltd, etc.) or a small Store, including 3-D displays, decorations, Dressing
mannequin’s, signs for smooth traffic
flow and layout (floor planning) of store space. The overall purpose of visual
merchandising is to get customers to come into the store and spend their money.
“To earn money you have
to spend money” is not a good idea. There’s no harm in being clever with
budgets and creating inspiring displays by Recycling items and reusing props,
mannequins and fittings.
So Visual Merchandising team suggested
upcycle (reuse discarded objects or material in
such a way as to create a product of higher quality or value than the original)
many of the original fittings as a great way to improve the visual impact of
interior design, merchandising and displays whilst keeping renovation costs to
a minimum – a key consideration for almost every small, independent retailer.
Sometimes recycling is simply
putting something in the right bin – but there can be an art to it as well.
Many designers have found creative ways to upcycle used materials into new
design objects that rival the original purposes of their constituent parts. We
tried to do similar for ‘A Jaffe’s’ first store [outside New York]. Shuttle
cocks, toothpicks,
bottle
cleaners, all used to create a magical theme for this romantic diamond ring
destination. There were other magical and yet functional display elements like
floating water hyacinth and twisted tree with wooden water drops for ring
display.

'Whilst recycling and, more recently,
up-cycling are seen to be a current trend, in reality a good VM scheme has
always had a keen eye for turning something unloved into the proverbial silk
purse, with visual merchandisers often conscious that there may be something
that could be salvaged, refurbished and worked into a new window scheme,
continues Carl Smallshaw, senior business development manager at Visual
Thinking and former store design project manager for George, 'Reclaimed crates
used as shelving, old sewing tables deployed as focal points, charming vintage
props – recycling and up-cycling VM equipment is not only on trend, but also an
imaginative way to create a more immersive, experiential retail experience that
encourages shoppers to lift their heads above their mobile devices, and
rediscover the delights of in store.'

Smallshaw says resourcefulness is
often second nature but it's imperative that teams are aware of product life
cycles, developing material trends, environmental targets and their own
company's green agenda.
Another great example is the latest store concept by Wickes. A total of 95 per cent of the store, including timber used for display elements, such as primary display fixturing, focal points and browsing and tools tables, is made from and using materials and products shoppers can buy in store. As well as being resourceful, it delivers a retail environment that is truly authentic and connected with the brand.

Recycling, reworking and up-cycling is
challenging but done properly can mean cost savings, a more inventive scheme
and a sense of satisfaction that goes beyond the achieved look and feel.
Striking the right balance between the available budget and the ultimate
'closed loop recycling' utopia is a journey – the decisions along the way must
be made collaboratively by a strong team working together.

References:
http://retaildesignblog.net/tag/recycled-materials/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_merchandising
http://www.payalrhodes.com/tag/visual-merchandising/
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/definition/visual-merchandising
http://www.retail-focus.co.uk/features/1461-reuse-recycle-resourceful-vm
https://thewindowlane.wordpress.com/tag/recycling-visual-merchandising/
http://www.retail-focus.co.uk/features/1315-sustainable-design-back-to-nature
https://engineering.dartmouth.edu/~d30345d/courses/engs171/DfRecycling
Thanks for publishing my blog. Great information! :)
ReplyDeleteI have to search sites with relevant information on given topic and provide them to teacher our opinion and the article. personnel lift melbourne
ReplyDeleteI recently came across your article and have been reading along. I want to express my admiration of your writing skill and ability to make readers read from the beginning to the end. I would like to read newer posts and to share my thoughts with you go to website
ReplyDelete