Showing posts with label Packaging Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Packaging Design. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Creative Industrial Design : Literalist Product Packaging


naoto fukasawa

was born in yamanashi prefecture, japan, in1956.
he graduated from tama art university's product
design department in art and 3D design in 1980.
until 1988, fukasawa worked as a designer at
seiko-epson corp.
in 1989, he left japan for the united states.
in san francisco he joined a small office that had
employed 15 persons - ‘ID two’, the predecessor
to ‘IDEO’, which now has 450 staff in san francisco,
palo alto, boston, chicago, london and munich.
after eight years fukasawa returned home.
in 1996, he helped set up ‘IDEO’ in japan - a team
of eight designers working mainly for the japanese
market. he stayed with it until december 2002.
naoto fukasawa he went independent and in
january 2003 he established ‘naoto fukasawa design
in tokyo. fukasawa joined the advisory board of the
japanese company ‘MUJI’.
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Consumers will drive sustainable packaging design


Dorothy Mackenzie, packagingnews.co.uk, 10 June 2009
Dorothy Mackenzie, chairman of creative agency Dragon Rouge, argues that consumers' desire for more sustainable packaging should prompt a new wave of manufacturer-led product and pack innovation. 

Consumers, particularly in the UK, have expressed concern about packaging waste – to a level often disproportionate to the real impact of packaging and at the expense of concern about other aspects of products' sustainability performance. This has encouraged retailers to launch a packaging crusade with commitments, such as Wal-Mart's target to reduce packaging by 5% over the next four years.  
Retailers grabbed the initiative on packaging, leaving many manufacturers standing on the sidelines trying to deal with conflicting retailer agendas, such as weight reduction versus recyclabilty or use of recylcate versus biodegradability. It has appeared as though retailers were calling all the shots, exhorting manufacturer's brands into minor packaging changes that may have offered some incremental improvements, but which were largely missed by consumers.  
Some companies – notably Unilever – have been introducing innovative consumer packaging with a noticeably better environmental footprint, but many others have been slow to act in a way that consumers recognise, although they may have been achieving worthwhile changes in transport or outer packaging. This represents a missed opportunity for building positive engagement with consumers. Consumers are likely to be positively influenced by innovative packaging that delivers environmental benefits, provided of course, that it also offers convenience and other performance benefits.  
In some areas, the need for consumers to modify their behaviour, to adapt to the new packaging format, can offer a good platform for interaction and dialogue. It provides some interesting new content for brand communication and some opportunities for inspiring on-pack messaging.  Refill packs are being explored again, for example by Dairy Crest, and while this will be far from an automatic and easy switch for consumer, it does add some interest and excitement to an otherwise generic and routine purchase – and something to talk about.  
To achieve significant improvements, however, it will often be necessary to consider the product and pack together, rather than focus simply on changing the pack around the existing product. We have already seen examples of this with concentrate detergents and there will be more. The desire to reduce the impact of the packaging stimulates a "why does it have to be like this?" review of the product as well. This could be a more productive starting point for innovation than focusing on packaging alone.  
This more holistic approach, considering product and packaging together, also gives manufacturers an opportunity to take a step beyond where retailers can go by building sustainability into the brand and product itself, rather than just looking for amendments to existing systems. This approach will require a close partnership with the packaging and product supply chain, to unleash their deep levels of knowledge to speed up the innovation process. It will also demand a good understanding of consumer insights to know what is possible. 
Dragon Rouge has joined forces with Cook Business Consulting to deliver new product and packaging ideas, for brand owners and retailers, that are more sustainable and commercially attractive.

MSU wins $400,000 from Coca-Cola Company to create packaging innovation, sustainability center

Published: Jan. 23, 2009 
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Improving the global sustainability of product packaging took a meaningful step forward with a new collaboration proposed by The Coca-Cola Company and Michigan State University. Coca-Cola awarded $400,000 to MSU’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources to help establish a new Center for Packaging Innovation and Sustainability.

The planned center, to be housed in the MSU School of Packaging, will serve as a think tank for packaging innovation and sustainability and a research and education hub to measure and reduce packaging’s environmental impact. The Coca-Cola grant represents the initiating gift in a campaign to establish the global center.

"The Coca-Cola Company is honored to collaborate with Michigan State University in its quest to bring corporate, academic and packaging professionals together to foster new ideas in sustainable packaging,” said Ingrid Saunders Jones, senior vice president of global community connections for The Coca-Cola Company.

“Our company has set ambitious environmental goals to not only deliver quality products, but to also have minimal impact on the environment. Research and work generated through this collaboration with MSU will assist us in reaching our goals,” she said.

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Thursday, April 9, 2009

NASA Awards Grant to RIT to Develop New Polymer Foam Packaging for Lunar Missions


The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has awarded Rochester Institute of Technology a contract for $101,237 for a six-month study to develop new polymer foam packaging materials for protecting life support systems on lunar missions. The project will be led by Changfeng Ge, professor in the RIT College of Applied Science and Technology and director of the American Packaging Corp. Center for Packaging Innovation, based in the college.

NASA scientists have been working on the project ‘Portable Life Support System Packaging Phase’ for some time. This award to RIT is part of Phase III. Ge will develop several new types of polymer packaging materials, specifically single uniform foam, layer-structured foam, composite foam and closed cell foam filled with light gas. He’ll also develop the manufacturing plan to produce the materials. The new materials will protect the astronaut’s life support system from the impact while working outside of lunar vehicles, taking soil samples on the moon, for example.

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