December 10th, 2013 | 11:03 am
Until recently, direct bottle printing was really only an option for glass bottles. But that’s changing. Today, there are a number of options for direct printing bottles, both glass and plastic. Yet another step forward in sustainable packaging design techniques.
Read more on the next wave of bottle and container decorating here.
TAGS: beverage, bottles, Dutch, environment, food, green, Netherlands, packaging design, recycling, Stepfive, sustainability
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May 03rd, 2013 | 01:57 pm
At Dutch website Groene Offerte you’ll find loads of interesting packaging design related articles, opinions and other stuff (all in Dutch). Especially the serie ‘Food for Thought’ gives entertaining and remarkable examples of packaging design in all its aspects, good or bad.
Groene Offerte is established for the complete design industry. The site is set up to grow: more and more contacts, knowledge and new insights. In this way Groene Offerte wants to help and encourage the design industry with their key role of this industry in the sustainable development of society and economy.
Food for Thought at Groene Offerte (all in Dutch).
TAGS: Dutch, food, graphic design, Groene Offerte, innovation, inspiration, Netherlands, packaging design, recycling, Stepfive, sustainability
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June 10th, 2011 | 08:26 am
Len Ostroff, CEO of Informous, a vertical content marketing search engine for the packaging and plastics industries, pleads for QR codes on packaging:
”If including social media is the packaging trend of today, QR codes are the trend of tomorrow.”
More on smart packaging design and QR codes here, here and here.
TAGS: Len Ostroff, packaging design, QR code, social media, trend
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May 27th, 2011 | 04:00 pm
Excellent Packaging design and social responsibility can go hand in hand. A good exemple is ‘No House Wine’, a new wine-label that uses it’s profits to build houses for so called kid-parents (older brothers and sisters who take care of their younger ones) of HIV-contaminated families. It prevents kids from getting homeless after their parents died of AIDS.
The international awarded design (New York Festivals (silver), Art Directors Club Nederland (zilveren lamp), Epica (silver) was designed by Edwin Vollebergh. It delicately cites the subject (houses and moving): an apparently handwritten signing on the front and a label made of packaging-tape on the back.
More on ‘No House’ Wine here.
TAGS: AIDS, beverage, Dutch, Edwin Vollebergh, HIV, Netherlands, packaging design, social responsibility, wine, Zilveren lamp
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