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Luxury packaging sets the pace

If you want to steal ideas for out­stand­ing pack­ag­ing, then the lux­u­ry sec­tor is the place to start. After all, if brands can’t con­vince buy­ers to pay often out­ra­geous pre­mi­ums, then they die.

Lux­u­ry brands have the biggest bud­gets, the most sophis­ti­cat­ed con­sumers and the most ambi­tious design­ers. If an idea works here, it is just a mat­ter of time before it fil­ters down to the mid-mar­ket.

So what are the lat­est trends in lux­u­ry goods? Who bet­ter to ask than Ali­son Church, event direc­tor for easy­Fairs’ Lux­u­ry Pack­ag­ing Exhi­bi­tion, the UK’s only lux­u­ry pack­ag­ing event.

“The pack­ag­ing indus­try is con­stant­ly evolv­ing. When I first start­ed work­ing on the show, sus­tain­abil­i­ty was top­ping the agen­da,” she says. “It’s still impor­tant, but a key dri­ver behind inno­va­tion in the last year has been pack dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion.

Shelf stand-out has always been para­mount, but increas­ing­ly brands are look­ing at how to engage with their cus­tomers beyond the shelf, which has led to an increase in com­pa­nies cre­at­ing an expe­ri­ence around their prod­uct through their pack­ag­ing, and link­ing close­ly with their social media and mar­ket­ing strate­gies. As a result, pack­ag­ing inno­va­tion to some extent is being dri­ven by con­sumers who direct­ly inter­act with brands to influ­ence their deci­sions. In gen­er­al, brands today are lis­ten­ing and ini­tia­tives such as per­son­alised pack­ag­ing are boom­ing.”

One-offs and col­lab­o­ra­tions are a reli­able way to gen­er­ate this sense of unique­ness. Hay­ley Ard, head of con­sumer lifestyle at trend watch­ing con­sul­tan­cy Sty­lus, points to Dom Pérignon champagne’s Sep­tem­ber 2013 col­lab­o­ra­tion with Amer­i­can artist Jeff Koons as a prime exam­ple.

Increas­ing­ly brands are look­ing at how to engage with their cus­tomers beyond the shelf

“Koons designed a range of vivid­ly coloured, lim­it­ed-edi­tion gift sets for the French house’s vin­tage cham­pagnes, influ­enced by his play­ful, bub­ble-shaped sculp­tures,” she says. “The pack­ag­ing, which aligns the cham­pagne bot­tles with inflat­able toys, appeals strong­ly to the youth mar­ket. A bot­tle of Rosé Vin­tage 2003 is con­cealed in an eye-catch­ing adap­ta­tion of Koons’ Bal­loon Venus sculp­ture – a sea of reflec­tive curves in bright fuch­sia.”

BARE TYPOGRAPHY

Anoth­er trend is stripped back typog­ra­phy. Ms Ard says: “As con­sumers over­whelmed by prod­uct choic­es tune out loud sig­nals, lux­u­ry brands are pro­mot­ing pack­ag­ing with pared-down typog­ra­phy, sparse lay­outs and short strings of num­bers. Sophis­ti­cat­ed mono­grams replace logos. This strat­e­gy appeals to con­sumers who val­ue hum­ble brand trans­paren­cy and who choose prod­ucts based on essen­tial infor­ma­tion.”

Unusu­al mate­ri­als are play­ing an increas­ing role. Design agency Sed­ley Place cre­at­ed a new look for John­nie Walk­er whisky. Sed­ley Place direc­tor Ron Cre­gan says: “Diageo’s John­nie Walk­er Wil­low Pat­tern Lim­it­ed Edi­tions, cre­at­ed for the John­nie Walk­er hous­es in Shang­hai and Bei­jing, are made of porce­lain in a direct homage to the Wil­low Pat­tern porce­lain so beloved by pre­vi­ous gen­er­a­tions. The bot­tles have a weight in the hand which is also cool and smooth to the touch because of the porce­lain fin­ish. Oth­er lim­it­ed edi­tions, such as John­nie Walker’s Epic Dates range, fea­ture inset pewter labels and engraved bot­tles.

“When pack­ag­ing uses the finest mate­ri­als in this way, it assumes a visu­al lan­guage that con­veys brand aspects such as qual­i­ty, authen­tic­i­ty, her­itage and sheer plea­sure.”

Coley Porter Bell’s revamp of Per­ri­er-Jouët took a sim­i­lar­ly restrained, but out­ré, route. “The sub­tle arti­san crafts­man­ship evi­dent on the print fin­ish­es, neck foils and mono­gram seals were refined to reflect the brand’s dis­tinc­tive colour palette and enhance the lux­u­ry codes in a sub­tler, more har­mo­nious way,” says Coley Porter Bell chief exec­u­tive Vicky Bullen.

Osten­ta­tion is out. Restrained, refined, unique and sub­tle are in. Nat­u­ral­ly, the low­er-tiered prod­ucts will fol­low suit, mean­ing the lux­u­ry brands will soon need a new iter­a­tion. But for now, that’s the dom­i­nant ethos.