Monday, January 26, 2009

The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly

The Bad



Kiehl's Beauty Products




Kiehl's is a well known brand. It is featured in several magazines from Seventeen to Bazaar. Kiehl's users boast wonders, but their beautifying products have ugly packaging! As a consumer, I would care less about the product because the labels and bottles seem so generic. It looks like someone created the labels in word, bought bottles from the dollar store, and are trying to sell bootleg.



Sellars Shop Towels



The towels are tough againsts gruff and grime, but the packaging is also tough to read! The type wraps too wide and makes it harder to read. The design has no visual impact, and the packaging is lopsided which makes it look cheap.



Imusa - Tortilla Press






Imusa's busy photographic background is distracting. While it does work up the desire for a fiesta, it takes away from important elements. Firstly, it makes it difficult to read the white and colored type. Secondly, it takes away from the actual product. It takes the consumer a couple seconds to register the image of the press as the selling product amongst the set up. Also, the natural tendency for English reading Americans is to read left to right, and to examine naturally left to right. They placed their logo to the right which makes the brand harder to find in a crowd of similar boxes. Because their products are for mexican food, I don't quite understand the whole poorly-traced knight they have for the logo.

The Good





Tropicana Orange Juice


Tropicana's new orange juice bottles are not only ergonomic, making it easier to pour, they are also stylish. The exclamation-like labels are visually appealing and simple, making them easy to read. Different colors help distinguish different options like "With pulp". The bottles look curvaceous and lean, making the product appear healthy, and by using transparent bottles the consumer is able to see what they're getting.


Axe Styling Pomade


Axe takes the cake for appealing designs aimed for men. The packaging looks sporty, modern, and attractive. The unusual shape makes it interesting and easier to ship as well as stack on shelves. They're hoping the stacking feature will entice you take advantage of all their styling options: "Messy", "Spiked", "Clean", and "Shaggy", for your own totem of good looking hair.


Beauty Engineered Forever - Cleaning Products



These cleaning products show spunk with creative typography. Their clean (no pun intended) look is appealing, not generic. Their witty sayings will win any consumer over a smiling cartoon scrub. Their clear products give a sense of purity, which is important because Beauty Engineered Forever products are enviromentally friendly.

-Laura

4 comments:

  1. I like the Beauty engineered forever
    its clean and straight to the point

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  2. I remember thinking that about Kiehl's packaging.. I was looking at it for the first time at Nordstrom's and was thinking "wow.. how could this be an expensive brand of beauty products, the packaging is horrible" but I think what they were trying to do is make it look like something you might have found at an apothecary in the old days when labels kind of looked like that... not entirely sure but I think that might have something to do with it.

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  3. The new Tropicana package design IS very appealing. It looks more sophisticated and expensive. I like the fun bottle design and label design.

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  4. The Kiehl's bottle and label is bad. I can not believe that it sells at boutiques. I would add a little design (symbolic) to it and the typography could be more interesting. The Container looks cheap.

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