Please do it like before.

The hugely popular Tokyo Metro manner posters by illustrator Bunpei Yorifuji got a make-over. Unforunately the sometimes unintentionally funny slogan "Please do it at home" has been replaced. Like:

The hugely popular Tokyo Metro manner posters by illustrator Bunpei Yorifuji got a make-over. Unforunately the sometimes unintentionally funny slogan "Please do it at home" has been replaced. Like:
Head. Hands. Heart. We believe that there is a real connection between craftsmanship and communication. Working together as a group of skilled craftsmen we fuse contemporary design (Meyer) and the art of storytelling (Miller) with cutting edge technology (Smith), relentlessly pushing into new territory by creating pioneering work.
As information and intelligence becomes the domain of computers, society will place more value on the one human ability that cannot be automated: Emotions.
People want to experience beauty, enjoy one’s work, feel passion, they want to interact with each other. We all want.
That’s why we believe that the future of brands is interaction, not commodity. It’s not something you buy, but something you participate in.
I am a big fan of those Tokyo Metro posters, got a lot of photographs of them, Once I tried to get one, but I was told it was impossible, they are obviously very popular :-)
thanks for the post
cheers,
Lasse Kusk