Billboard that smells like French Fries tempts you to go to McDonald’s

There’s a chocolate drink factory near our place and when the wind blows down the main street, the smell of chocolate fills the entire area and every person is brought back to their childhood drinking a cup of hot cocoa in the morning. Also, on my walk to and from the office and my house, I pass by a McDonald’s store. When I’m especially hungry, that distinct smell of burger and fries (and sometimes chicken) actually tempts me to make a detour and enter the store to buy my dinner.

Designer: TBWANeboko and Raul & Rigel for McDonalds

There are just some food brands that triggers our olfactory nerves and makes us want to buy their products to satisfy this craving brought about by smell. McDonald’s believes they’re one of those brands and in Netherlands, they’re putting this to good, creative, and aromatic use. Their ad agency TBWANeboko worked with production company Raul&Rigel to put up a series of unbranded street billboards with just the red and yellow colors. When you pass by within 5 meters of them, you get to smell the distinct aroma of McDonald’s French Fries, hopefully triggering a craving.

These scented billboards actually have a hidden compartment in them to store the aforementioned fries. There’s also an internal heat and ventilation system that is responsible for intensifying this smell and tempt anyone passing by to get fries. Of course they are located strategically near a McDonald’s, 200 meters away in fact, so that you can sate that craving and get your favorite fries (and maybe other things) because of that billboard smell.

It’s a pretty creative way to take advantage of that feeling evoked in us when we smell something so distinct. It’s bad news though for people like me who are trying to stay away from carbs. Good thing that fries-scented billboard is only in the Netherlands, although passing by that McDonald’s every day is already temptation enough.

The post Billboard that smells like French Fries tempts you to go to McDonald’s first appeared on Yanko Design.

Realistic Grilled Steak Dinner Candles Look Good Enough to Eat

Because Japan is famous for developing products long before we recognize the need for them, this is the steak candle from century-old Japanese candle manufacturer Kameyama. It looks like a steak dinner and smells like a steak dinner, leading me to question whether or not it really is a steak dinner. Obviously, I’m afraid I have no choice but to convince a friend to take a bite and find out.

The steak candle set, available from the Japan Trend Shop for $25, includes steak, potato, beans, and carrot candles, which are all “charcoal-grilled meat” scented. Are they the perfect candles for lighting in the bedroom to set the mood for an evening of romance? Probably not, but that won’t stop me from trying.

The steak candle has a burn time of about an hour and the vegetables about five minutes apiece. That’s not a very long time, but still significantly longer than it would take me to enjoy an actual steak dinner, with my personal best being before the waiter could even set the plate down on the table.

Adventure Scents Potpourri Smell Like RPG Games

If you are the sort of gamer who is always after the most realism possible, we have something you might want. What you see here aren’t candles, they are Adventure Scents and are designed to bring more realism to your RPG gaming. If you are in a stable climbing on your trusty steed, break out the Horse Stable scent to set the mood.

adventure-candles-1zoom in

There are 40 scents in all, including Vampire’s Lair, Dragon’s Cave, Fishing Docks, Rowdy Tavern, Moldy Crypt, and others. Not all sound like they smell terrible though, Healing Sanctuary might smell good as might Welcoming Inn.

adventure-candles-2zoom in

You can get some aimed at space RPG gamers too, like New Spaceship, Engine Room, Science Lap, and even Barren Moon. It sounds like a lot of work to open one of these scents up for each of your environments, but it would be cool; except for the one that smells like hay and horse poop.

Adventure Scents sell for $15(USD) each, but there’s a discount for five or more jars.

[via Geekdad]

SensorWake Alarm Wakes You Up With Nice Scents

sensorwake-1

Typical alarm clocks rely on loud, jarring sounds to wake you up. It’s effective, but it’s also a pretty rough way to get your day started. Guillaume Rolland, an 18-year-old French entrepreneur, thought there was a better way to go about it and created SensorWake. It’s an alarm clock that releases a scent, and in testing is able to wake 99% of people up within 2 minutes. Scents are stored in special replaceable pods, and range in variety from “Continental breakfast: Espresso & Hot Croissant” to “Candy Rush: Sweet peach & Strawberry candy”. If you fail to wake up after 3 minutes, then SensorWake will revert to a backup audible alarm so you don’t miss your important meeting. Each scent pod lasts up to 60 times. You can get in on the action with an $89 pledge, which includes a 2-capsule pack.

sensorwake-2

[ Project Page ]

Get Scentimental

Cleverly called “Scentimental,” this diffuser tantalizes multiple senses- not just smell! By scenting the spinning top diffusers, users can release beautiful aromas as they spin across surfaces. Aromatic and mesmerizing, they’re a fresh, fun, interactive way to bring people together. Create olfactory-reinforced memories that can later be recalled by the same nostalgic scents for years to come!

Designer: Samuel Bond

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(Get Scentimental was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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‘Madeleine’ is a Smell ‘Camera’ That Captures Scents Instead of Images

Smell Camera

The Madeleine is a camera that’s as unusual as cameras get. Because instead of immortalizing memories by capturing images of it, it captures smells instead. The odor-capturing ‘camera’ of sorts was developed by designer Amy Radcliffe using technology that’s used in the perfume industry.

Amy explains: “The Madeleine works in much the same way as a 35mm camera. Just as the camera records the light information of a visual in order to create a replica The Madeleine records the molecular information of a smell.”

Here’s how it works: the source of the scent or odor is placed inside the glass dome that’s connected to the main part of the Madeleine. A pump then extracts and pulls scent molecules, which are then captured in a resin trap. This trap can then be sent off to a lab to be analyzed and maybe even re-created.

Amy dubs this concept as “scent-ography” and envisions this as an alternative way of recording memories, saying: “From manipulating our emotional well-being through prescribed nostalgia, to the functional use of conditioned scent memory, our olfactory sense could take on a much more conscious role in the way we consume and record the world.”

VIA [ C|NET ]