Packaging design is where brand meets product in a way that either justifies the price or undermines it. A premium product in generic packaging cannot command a premium price. A mid-range product in excellent packaging can enter conversations it has no right to be in.
The packaging brief is different from every other design brief because the production constraints are real and specific. The label has to wrap correctly around a bottle with a specific neck radius. The box has to score and fold accurately. The colour has to be achievable in print without a fourth or fifth plate. Getting these things wrong is not a revision; it is a reprint.
We work with existing structural specifications or provide dieline templates for standard formats. For custom structural work, we can introduce structural design partners we have worked with on previous production jobs. All files we deliver are prepared with the technical documentation your print vendor needs to quote, proof, and produce correctly.
Many graphic designers can produce artwork that looks good on screen. Packaging design requires understanding how colour shifts from screen to print, how label materials affect finish appearance, how embossing or foiling changes the visual weight of an element, and how a design looks in a retail or hospitality environment under different lighting conditions. These are not abstract concerns. They are the difference between packaging that sells and packaging that sits on a shelf.
We take on a limited number of projects each quarter.