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The Modern Nose is a wine aroma kit that helps sommeliers and wine enthusiasts learn to recognize different flavors and aromas in wine.
Packagings of the World is a packaging design archive showcasing the best, most interesting and creative packaging work worldwide. We will try to make the archive as digestible and as possible with less text, like they say, pictures speaks a thousand words!
The Modern Nose is a wine aroma kit that helps sommeliers and wine enthusiasts learn to recognize different flavors and aromas in wine.
Photos: Markus Joutsela.
PACK-AGE: interdisciplinary packaging design project
is an innovative packaging design course organized by Aalto University. It is uniting design, business and engineering thinking to project-based learning. More info: blogs.aalto.fi/package
The Modern Nose is a wine aroma kit that helps sommeliers and wine enthusiasts learn to recognize different flavors and aromas in wine.
I really loved the font Christophe Stoll did recently using Fontstruct, It is called Postcode and named after the 1978 stamp series of Gert Dumbar and René van Raalte. Thank you for your inspiration! I really enjoyed while doing these and will add some photos soon. Best,
Chriak aka Christopher Çolak
Packagings of the World is a packaging design archive showcasing the best, most interesting and creative packaging work worldwide. We will try to make the archive as digestible and as possible with less text, like they say, pictures speaks a thousand words!
Packaging design exercise using Illustrator CS4 and it's brilliant gradient Tool. I used a picture of myself to see how I would look on a beer label and the result is pretty funny...
There’s nothing like enjoying a nice refreshing crisp pint of cider in the English countryside. The labels and basic communication tools I’ve designed for Newton’s Farmhouse Cider, a fictional brand of cider, reflect this idea through the use of a set of illustrations based on wildlife typically found in the British countryside. These minimal illustrations give the labels a contemporary look yet hold on to the traditional values and emotions that ar associated with the product. Next to that, they give the bottles and every deviated communication tool a distinct look helping it to stand out from the competition.
Waking up in the morning, meeting a friend or reading a book; moments in everybody’s day that just get that little bit better with a nice cup of coffee on the side. Depending on the moment, the people you’re with or your personal taste call for different blends and intensities of brew. That’s why Moka’s coffee blends have different characters assigned to them. Each with it’s own distinct personality like a good listener, an analytic thinker or even a shoulder to cry on.
Through the use of limited angles, line withs and a rigid grid I created a set of particular illustrations depicting the different characters each with it’s own unique personality. These are used, not only on the packaging, but throughout the different promotional items as well. Not just through the use of these characters but with bold colours as well the different flavours are instantly recognisable and the packaging stands out from the competition on the supermarket shelves. Pairing these bright colours with black ensures a premium yet vibrant appearance for both the packaging and all derived promotional materials.
Here are some packaging comps. Sorry for the crappy photo quality but I hope you can get some kind of idea. The segment is sold in Health Food stores and the target audience is age 35+ women. 3rd comp is a unbleached brown paper background.
One could argue that all pasta basically is the same thing apart from its shape. And even though you could consider this to be true, the different shapes and sizes do serve an actual purpose. Depending on the type of sauce you want to serve with your pasta dish, the shapes of the pasta help to absorb the ingredients.
That is why I created a set of illustrations using a distinct visual style using geometrical shapes and a limited colour pallet highlighting the different pasta shapes. Supported by a vivid background colour to help set the different packaging designs apart however ensures they form a strong series as well. As apposed to competing brands who often use the same colour pallet throughout their range of packaging, the Etrusco brand gets a vibrant look despite a nostalgic feel thanks to the use of illustration and typography. This helps to set it apart from the competition, especially on the supermarket’s shelves.
Photo: Thomas Ruotsalainen. PACK-AGE: interdisciplinary packaging design project
is an innovative packaging design course organized by Aalto University. It is uniting design, business and engineering thinking to project-based learning. More info: blogs.aalto.fi/package/
Courageux Designed by Rhinocerosred Design www.packiii.com/11585/courageux-designed-by-rhinocerosred...