XXO
SET 1 – Horn Lake Target, October 2019 Tour
This is the view one would find as he or she walks past Food Avenue Express and into the rest of the salesfloor proper. Most “regular” Target stores, even today, have a fairly consistent layout, and Horn Lake is no exception. The small “Bullseye’s Playground” dollar department is on our left, and as we move forward, we enter apparel, with women’s clothing specifically occupying the entire perimeter wall that we see here. Beyond that, we’ll move past the fitting rooms in the back right corner into men’s apparel, and encounter various other general merchandise departments past that.
Unfortunately this isn’t my best shot of it, so of course it’s naturally the one we’re stopping on today, lol. In any case, though, you can see the beginnings of this store’s wall décor – colorful strands of neon, placed in a repeating wave pattern, subtly but effectively conveying motion to pull you forward into the salesfloor. I don’t believe I’ve ever really talked about the motion aspect before, but the more I think about it, the more I think that the waves were absolutely intentional in that regard. What do y’all think?
(c) 2023 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
XXO
SET 1 – Horn Lake Target, October 2019 Tour
This is the view one would find as he or she walks past Food Avenue Express and into the rest of the salesfloor proper. Most “regular” Target stores, even today, have a fairly consistent layout, and Horn Lake is no exception. The small “Bullseye’s Playground” dollar department is on our left, and as we move forward, we enter apparel, with women’s clothing specifically occupying the entire perimeter wall that we see here. Beyond that, we’ll move past the fitting rooms in the back right corner into men’s apparel, and encounter various other general merchandise departments past that.
Unfortunately this isn’t my best shot of it, so of course it’s naturally the one we’re stopping on today, lol. In any case, though, you can see the beginnings of this store’s wall décor – colorful strands of neon, placed in a repeating wave pattern, subtly but effectively conveying motion to pull you forward into the salesfloor. I don’t believe I’ve ever really talked about the motion aspect before, but the more I think about it, the more I think that the waves were absolutely intentional in that regard. What do y’all think?
(c) 2023 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)