Daily Signals 18.11.2025

Signals

Hot Bodies explores design for a warmer world, Vow launches lab-grown exosomes for skin repair and US businesses report real returns as generative AI adoption matures.

Hot Bodies explores how design can help us survive a warmer world

Hot Bodies, Singapore
Hot Bodies, Singapore
Hot Bodies, Singapore

Singapore – Hot Bodies is a new exhibition examining how apparel and wearable design can help humans adapt to global heat. Opening on 6 December 2025 in Singapore, the showcase arrives as the past decade becomes the hottest in Singapore’s recorded history, according to the Meteorological Service Singapore.

Supported by the SG Eco Fund and the DesignSingapore Council, the project from global brand practice Anak brings together 10 heat wear prototypes developed with guidance from research experts. The curatorial brief asks global designers to consider how heat could shape new behaviours, aesthetics and adaptive systems – a pertinent question for one of the world’s densest and most humid nations.

The apparel on show ranges from practical to playful: Jean Jullien’s UPF50 Sunshell cape; Tanchen Studio’s cooling jade statement neckpiece; TMS.Site’s Hardwear Jacket for outdoor workers; and Harri’s inflatable self-cooling container.

Our Wellbeing Wear report explores how garments and accessories are being designed with extreme weather in mind, ushering in a new era of fashion design.

Strategic opportunity

Partner with climate experts and material innovators to develop climate-responsive products, positioning your brand to meet future consumer mindsets and rising demand for apparel and wearables that enhance comfort, performance and safety in hotter futures

Vow launches lab-grown exosomes for skin repair

Australia – Sydney-based biotech company Vow is expanding beyond cultured meat into functional beauty with the launch of cultured exosomes designed to regenerate skin at a biological level.

The firm has started a new brand called Membrane[actives]. Its debut ingredient, exo[membrane], is produced using Vow’s 20,000-litre bioreactor system under food-grade, serum-free conditions – a scalable alternative to plant- or human-derived exosomes.

Vow’s move reflects the rise of Elastic Brands – companies defined by their ability to stretch beyond category boundaries and apply core expertise in new, adaptive ways.

Unlike single-molecule actives, exosomes act as cellular messengers, transporting peptides and proteins deep into the skin. Early trials show promising results: in a dermatologist-led study of eight participants aged 30–40, redness reduced by 34% and wrinkle width by 20% within seven days following micro-needling and application.

Vow frames this as a turning point for biotech beauty: ethical, standardised and clinically validated ingredients that ‘speak the same language as the skin’. This echoes analysis from our Accredited Beauty macrotrend report, in which we explored how consumers are increasingly seeking proof points on product quality, efficacy and sustainability in the beauty sector.

Photography by Jess Loiterton, Australia

Strategic opportunity

Re-imagine core capabilities for new categories and products that adapt to evolving consumer needs, proving your brand can stretch, respond and stay relevant in a rapidly shifting marketplace

Stat: US businesses report real returns as generative AI adoption matures

AI imagery by The Future Laboratory, UK AI imagery by The Future Laboratory, UK

US – A new study from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania challenges months of pessimism about generative AI’s business value. Wharton’s survey of more than 800 US firms found that, of the companies actively measuring returns, 74% say generative AI is already delivering a positive return on investment (ROI), with many expecting gains to grow over the next two to three years.

ROI varies sharply by sector: In tech and telecoms, 88% report at least moderately positive returns, in banking this dips to 83%, while retail lags behind at 54%.

Seniority also shapes perception: 81% of vice-presidents and above see positive ROI, compared to 69% of managers and directors, who are more likely to still be in pilot mode. Smaller companies are adapting fastest – just 57% of firms with revenues above £1.5bn ($2bn, €1.7bn) report positive returns so far – as large enterprises struggle to reset established workflows at speed.

Wharton’s findings signal a more uneven, industry-specific and role-dependent AI adoption curve than early narratives suggested. This reflects insights we explore in The Synothocene Era macrotrend; perception of generative AI is evolving to recognise this technology as powerful, but requiring realistic expectations and integration.

Strategic opportunity

Don’t rush AI adoption. Focus on practical, workflow-driven use cases that boost productivity, support measurable ROI and upskill teams to ensure successful, sustainable integration

Previous Daily Signals Articles
The Trend:  The New Age of Discovery

Daily Signals

The Trend:  The New Age of Discovery

Where can consumers still find newness amid algorithm fatigue, ad blockers and saturated content platforms? Part of the answer lies in gatekeeping ...
Technology : Discovery : Retail
The Big Idea: The Future of  Dating Apps

Daily Signals

The Big Idea: The Future of Dating Apps

Hinge is the ‘designed to be deleted’ dating app now turning to real-life connections to tackle Gen Z loneliness. The Future Laboratory spoke to pr...
Technology : Dating Apps : Hinge
The Campaign: Why Apple leaned into artisanal charm for 2025 festive push

Daily Signals

The Campaign: Why Apple leaned into artisanal charm for 2025 festive push

Apple’s 2025 Christmas campaign A Critter Carol puts human craftsmanship front and centre.
Technology : Advertising & Branding : Apple
The Viewpoint: Cyberchondria and Its Cure

Daily Signals

The Viewpoint: Cyberchondria and Its Cure

The democratisation of medical knowledge – and the spread of fake news – has opened the doors to a new kind of cyberchondria. Jay Topham, co-founde...
Technology : Cyberchondria : Health
The Space: Koibird’s London store mixes digital and physical

Daily Signals

The Space: Koibird’s London store mixes digital and physical

A new wave of designers is bridging the virtual chaos of gaming realms and extended reality with the tactile authenticity of human craft.  
Technology : Retail : Design
Download the Future Forecast 2026 report

Daily Signals

Download the Future Forecast 2026 report

Now that you know what shaped 2025, discover what’s next.
Future Forecast
How Marcin Rusak and Perrier-Jouët translated plant life into sonic installations at Design Miami 2025

Daily Signals

How Marcin Rusak and Perrier-Jouët translated plant life into sonic installations at Design Miami 2025

At Design Miami 2025, designer Marcin Rusak partnered with champagne house Perrier-Jouët to translate the hidden life of plants into a sculptural, ...
Design : Luxury : Drink
Why Myndstream and Mayo Clinic believe music is the future of medicine

Daily Signals

Why Myndstream and Mayo Clinic believe music is the future of medicine

Global wellness music brand Myndstream has partnered with Mayo Clinic to explore the clinical potential of functional music in healthcare.
Health : Music : Technology
Stat: US sports fans show high engagement across travel, gaming and media

Daily Signals

Stat: US sports fans show high engagement across travel, gaming and media

According to GWI’s latest Global Fan Study, 62% of US sports fans are more likely to take three to four international trips per year compared with ...
Sports : Travel : Statistic
How new Evil Ray suncare brand taps the unhinged humour opportunity

Daily Signals

How new Evil Ray suncare brand taps the unhinged humour opportunity

Australian creative agency Pembleton has unveiled Evil Ray, a bold new sunscreen brand designed in collaboration with iconic Australian artist Reg ...
Beauty : Healthcare : Sunscreen
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN