When to Use bottle design company?

08 Apr.,2024

 

Packaging plays an important role in a product’s success. No matter how good the product, if it isn’t marketed well or given its perfect packaging, it simply will not be chosen by consumers.

Bottles are an incredibly versatile packaging choice and suit a variety of products from cosmetics to food. Whatever the use, ensuring your bottle grabs attention and reflects your brand is important.

Here at Fillcon, we are bottle filling experts with years of experience in manufacturing, sourcing and filling a variety of packaging types. We have put together this helpful guide to bottle design, providing top tips for making bottles look amazing.

Find out more about our bottle filling capabilities.

How to Make Your Bottles Look Amazing

One of the biggest benefits of bottles packaging is just how adaptable they are. From colour to labelling, you can create designs no one else has.

Want to find out some of the many qualities bottles possess? Read our blog, 8 Benefits of Using Bottles for Product packaging.

Here are some of the top tips to consider when designing bottle packaging:

Play Around with Colour

Bottles present a fantastic customising opportunity due to their many finishes and colour. Plastic and glass bottles can be clear, frosted, or even coloured. With bottles, you can customise more than the label, and alter the bottles itself to suit you. Clear or frosted bottles let the consumer see the product inside and promote trust through transparency.

While bright bold colours for packaging may have gone out of fashion, colour can help your product stand out among the others. Neutral, tonal colours have become increasingly popular, with earthy hues trendy in our ever more eco-conscious world. Monochrome colour palettes give products a more masculine feel and is often favoured for unisex products.

Keep Branding Consistent

Once you have all your brand components in place, you want to plaster them everywhere, including on your bottle! Your logo, set colours, typeface, slogans, and other branding guides should be on all products and should be consistent. This way, consumers will recognise your product whether it’s on the shelves, online, or through advertising.

Creating a narrative for your brand through illustration and clever copywriting can engage consumers and create a buzz about your products. Even typefaces can influence perceptions for your brand; with serif fonts indicating heritage and tradition, and sans-serif seeming more modern and trendier. Although it may not be popular with everyone, brands with quirky slogans or unusual marketing tactics no doubt catch the eye and interest of consumers. Think outside the ‘bottle’ and watch the attention flock to your product.

Consider Travel-Size Products

Creating smaller versions of full-size products can promote awareness of your product, gain new consumers who have not used your product before, and get consumers to try (then fall in love with) your product. Before jetting off on holiday, consumers may pick up your product on a whim, try it, and decide to by again. It goes without saying that consumers love to try before they buy, and miniature versions of products give them that opportunity!

Find out more about the advantages of travel sized products here.

Sample or travel size products should reflect the same elements as full size versions, such as logos, colours and design. Your full-size versions will have miniature counterparts for dispersion in unexplored markets. Because of your consistent branding and instantly recognisable full-size product, consumers spot your product right away for repurchase!

See more: Sample Packaging Ideas and How to Get Started.

Inform the Consumer

Ensure your bottle has everything consumers need to know on it. Obviously include the fundamentals and legally required information, such as ingredients etc., but don’t neglect quirky instructions or eco-friendly mantras if applicable. Not only will your bottle inform consumers of what you want them to know, but it can be a smart marketing move, just make sure not to overdo it.

Some brands are renowned for having funny, or even slightly inappropriate, instructions on shower gels and other products, which get shared on social media and create a memorable user experience. Products with particular environmental positives may want to advertise this on the bottle and alert users to the good your brand is doing, as well as the good they are doing by staying loyal to you.

Keep it Simple

In the modern, trends sway towards minimalistic designs. Consumers don’t want to be overwhelmed and unable to even work out what scent a product is. They want simplicity, ease, and clean designs. Especially relevant for cosmetics, crisp white background and linear designs can seem clinical or medical, igniting trust in the consumer and potentially leading them to believe effects of the product. Consider your bottle design and the inferences about the product and brand consumers may make from the packaging.

However, bold and busy bottle designs may work for your product, for example products marketed towards children. Consult your branding guidelines and find a bottle design that reflect your product, its target market, its use, and your goals as a brand.

Learn More with Fillcon

Specialising in the health and beauty sector, Fillcon manufacture and fill a range of bottles, tubes, sachets and much more with a variety of products. Our specialist facilities and skilled team can fill almost anything, from full-size product ranges to cosmetic samples.

If you would like to create your dream bottle design and promote your product to the masses, contact Fillcon today.

The realm of retail perfume bottle design is both puzzling and paradoxical, despite the fact that their function is rather simple.

Their dazzling beauty set in glass separates them visually from conventional liquid dispensers, but in reality they serve the same purpose.

The narrative of perfume bottle creation is no less alluring and sophisticated as the fragrance it contains.

According to designer, photographer and filmmaker, Fabien Baron: “The designers are actually inspiring the perfumers and giving them ideas…Even if the fragrance is amazing, people won’t buy it if they don’t understand it. They need to feel a connection or it just won’t work.”

It is said that the devil is in the details, and this axiom couldn’t be truer than in the case of fragrance packaging and marketing.

When done correctly, the bottle’s mysterious allure, which is so much more than just serving as a dispenser of fragrance, is both boldly displayed, and simultaneously hidden in plain sight.

A bottle design must make both a fashion and a lifestyle statement in order to affect the ultimate perception of its contents. It should also appeal to consumers from diverse demographics.

While it might seem incongruous to imagine that the visual impact of a perfume can sometimes be more important than its olfactory powers, the idea of working from the outside in on a perfume has been standard operating procedure for many, many years. 

It’s like that proverbial cart before the horse, but it does not mean (again the paradox) that designers are free to design whatever they wish.

In fact, it often boxes them into a more deliberate approach. It is the bottle that will not only render the shape of the final formulation but will also, by its very presence, tell the story.

Once again in the words of Baron: “People love the story and what it stands for. Think of how we grow to appreciate the little quirks and imperfections in the people we fall in love with. The stronger our emotional connection, the more beauty we see.”

Not surprisingly, bottle design is even more important to contemporary perfume creators and purveyors than it ever was in the past because of online shopping and its lure of convenience to the modern consumer.

Due to the fact that there is no tactile or human exchange in cyber space, it is the visual impact of a fragrance that captivates and kindles consumer interest.

French designer, Thierry De Baschmakoff, states: “The bottle is the first form of communication and the first contact that people have with a scent. So, of course, it has to resonate.”

It is the masterful attention to every aspect of development and packaging that lures the consumer into the luxurious cosmos of the fragrance captured within the bottle.

It is the door leading to the olfactory adventure that both attracts attention and helps to sell the fragrance.

An aesthetically designed perfume bottle boosts the value of an elegant scent, which in turn permits perfume houses to glean more profits and establish a stronger foothold in this highly competitive global market place.

A Relevant Study

A 2014 conference paper authored by Camila Assis Peres Silva from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil and entitled: Packaging, Color and Scent Perception was presented at the 9th International Conference on Design and Emotion.

The focus was the importance of using colors in a packaging design for perfumes as a means to visually communicate with consumers and influence fragrance perception. Results indicated that this works because unspoken qualities are assigned to colors as they reflect every day experiences.

For example, the fire, which exudes warmth, ranges from yellow to red and ice, which translates into coldness, is blue. In addition, shape, texture and color when combined must be consistent if they are to trigger a desired response.

Perfume Bottle Design As Art Form

Scent was a prized commodity in the ancient world, and artifacts from early cultures reveal many different types of storage vessels.

The Egyptians created ornamental flasks made of clay and wood, and Palestinians constructed exquisitely colored glass bottles to house their fragrances.

Hand-painted vases in animal shapes were favored by the early Greeks, and the Romans were known to scoop out the innards of precious stones to serve as containers for scents that were as treasured as their contents.

According to Mary Ellen Lapsansky, vice president of the Fragrance Foundation, a US-based organization that promotes and educates consumers about perfume use: “The bottle should be an ‘objet d’art;’ it’s really what makes the statement. It’s the selling point… Customers don’t just pay for the perfume inside but also for the attractive bottle, since the two go hand in hand. Major perfume houses pay special attention to how they design the perfume bottle, although very few dare to be too different in their presentation.”

Contemporary perfume bottle designs have become bolder and even iconoclastic, using unexpected and odd shapes, such as the human form, which don’t usually inspire motifs for packaging.

Also, societal influences often show themselves. For example, scent bottles targeted for sale to the urban youth sector often feature aspects of street graffiti and Internet culture.

Perfume Bottle Collections

Perfume bottles are luxury artifacts from eras long faded into the tunnel of time. They are integral to an historical narrative regarding the essence of beauty down through the centuries. 

Popular throughout Europe during the Middle Ages, bottles were constructed from a wide range of ceramic, glass and metal materials. 

Originally hand-crafted individually in small quantities, the myriad of advancements borne from the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century transformed the manufacturing of perfume bottles into a major industry for established glass makers and perfume houses.

Antique and vintage perfume bottles can be small or large, and run the gamut in shape and design. At the dawn of the last century, perfume bottles were also designed as jewelry to be worn as necklaces. 

There are, however, some qualities that are considered more collectable than others. Czechoslovakian perfume bottles, for example, are highly prized for their vivid coloration, finishes, and ornamentation.

Composed of crystal, these bottles often have intricate stoppers that can be as large as the bottle itself.

Edwardian perfume bottles were often constructed entirely of silver or gold and adorned with complex engravings, and Victorian perfume bottles are known for their glass designs and predominantly silver stoppers.

Jonathan Cohen, a marketing manager at DuPont, a world manufacturer of resins used for for a myriad of packaging applications states: “Today, almost all stoppers for even the most expensive fragrances are made out of plastic…a  lighter, unbreakable polymer that still offers a glass-like sparkle and transparency. The polymer is resistant to the ingredients of the fragrance and does not alter the nature of the scent.”

According to Helen Farnsworth, archivist at the International Perfume Bottle Association (IPBA), for most collectors, the value of perfume bottles has nothing at all to do with whether or not they still contain their original fragrance. 

She states: “It’s not easy to point at what makes a bottle collectable – it can be the look of the bottle, the designer, the brand or the smell. There’s an endless variety of factors and it’s very subjective… However, these bottles are worth even more money if the fragrance is still inside and the box has not been opened.”

Today, expert perfume bottle designers are pushing that creative envelope even further, as materials like color-coated glass, lightweight plastics and even wood have become more readily and economically available. 

These are adapted for use in dramatic and sophisticated designs for bottles in every shape and size.

Alpha Aromatics And Fragrance Design

Alpha Aromatics’ roots began after the trying aftermath of World War II, and ever since, we have been ‘building great scents that build great brands”, a mantra that has remained unchanged for the last seven decades.

Located in suburban Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, we are known for our masterful ability to transform the vision of any enterprise into an unforgettable olfactory communion between products and consumers that is certain to attract and inspire traffic and induce brand loyalty.

While we are not in the perfume bottle design business, we recognize it to be a vital piece of the puzzle of perfume brand creation. We value its importance and see it similar to that geometric axiom about the whole being equal to the sum of all its parts.

In fact, our founder and CEO, Arnold Zlotnik, has amassed one of the most extensive collections of unforgettable, non-retail perfume bottles in North America — the most alluring of which are featured throughout this blog and throughout the halls of our manufacturing faculty.

Final thought on fragrance: There are no women who do not like perfume. There are only women who have not yet found their scent .~ Marilyn Monroe

Photo Credits: Jonas Neilson

When to Use bottle design company?

Why Perfume Bottle Design Is As Important As Scent Design