2026
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Al-Arfaj Flower Badge Campaign is a grassroots social design initiative launched in Kuwait on March 31, 2026. The project transformed Kuwait’s national flower, the Arfaj (Rhanterium epapposum), into a contemporary symbol of solidarity, resilience, and civic participation during a period of regional uncertainty caused by the war in the region. Inspired by the Remembrance Poppy badge in the United Kingdom, the campaign explored how a small wearable object could quietly become part of everyday life and collective memory within a Kuwaiti cultural context.
The Arfaj flower was chosen because of its deep environmental and cultural significance in Kuwait. Naturally blooming under harsh desert conditions, the plant has long been associated with endurance and survival, while historically serving practical uses such as grazing and fuel. The campaign reintroduced this familiar botanical element as a contemporary civic symbol connected to gratitude, unity, and public participation.
The visual language of the badge was intentionally simple, recognizable, and emotionally direct without becoming overly sentimental or decorative. The design needed to feel neutral, quiet, and respectful so that men and women, older and younger generations, and conservative and open-minded communities would all feel comfortable wearing it. This neutrality allowed the badge to move naturally between military uniforms, business suits, universities, hospitals, cafés, and government institutions.
The campaign adopted a decentralized and open-source model. Badge files were released publicly under a Creative Commons framework, allowing individuals, schools, businesses, maker spaces, and workshops to independently produce and distribute the badge using materials such as acrylic, metal, wood, embroidery, resin, and gold-plated finishes.
Within one month, the campaign generated approximately 20 million social media interactions, while more than 250,000 badges were independently produced and distributed across Kuwait. The initiative later expanded beyond Kuwait, inspiring similar flower-based solidarity campaigns across neighboring GCC countries.
The project demonstrates how design can function as social infrastructure capable of creating emotional connection, collective participation, cultural preservation, and civic engagement at a national scale.
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MAXI Landscape Design Studio
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Landscape Design - Residential Landscape
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Shanghai Shuixing Home Textiles Co., Ltd.
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Product Design - Textiles / Floor Coverings