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Ikea product shots have been fake for years. Now it’s taking CGI even further

[Image: @imma.gram]

BY Mark Wilson1 minute read

In 2014, the world was shocked to learn that the carefully coiffed scenes inside Ikea catalogs were actually not real photographs of real objects. At the time, approximately 75% of the photos were built with detailed, digital 3D models. They were fake—a way for Ikea’s global business to create marketing materials quickly and efficiently.

Six years later, Ikea’s prescient digital-first advertising is being pushed to new heights. Working with ad agency Wieden+Kennedy Tokyo, Ikea Japan has released a series of ads and even a live installation featuring Imma—the popular Japanese influencer who happens to be a CGI creation herself. (Okay, she’s technically created from a real human model photographed inside a scene. Imma’s 3D animated head is placed on top during postproduction.)

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[Photo: Ikea Japan]
Why is Ikea doing this? The campaign is to promote Ikea’s new Harajuku district store in Tokyo. Looking through the windows of the store from the outside, you can get a peek directly into Imma’s Ikea-strewn bedroom, rendered on an LED screen. There, she’s living her life: she sits on her couch, eats meals, makes calls, and posts plenty to the ‘gram. And you can see all of those social media posts made in Ikea’s room onImma’s own Instagram page, of course, creating a very watertight advertising campaign built entirely upon a fictitious person.

[Image: Ikea Japan]
Unsettling? Sure. Butreality itself is an increasingly digital construct, and Imma isone of many virtual modelscurrently on Instagram. A virtual model doesn’t even need a face to be effective, as the fashion labelHanifademonstrated recently, when it ran a completely digital runway show in which the dresses themselves were filled with otherwise invisible, shapely silhouettes. Once a novelty, the use of virtual models is particularly useful during a pandemic. So don’t be surprised if we see a lot more campaigns like this one—without even ever realizing it.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mark Wilson is the Global Design Editor at Fast Company. He has written about design, technology, and culture for almost 15 years More


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