Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Picture


dove

 for the one hand thumb idea(dove)

for the variety hole size top idea(dove) need to add cap yet

Jingting Chen

Label Ideas

As we talked about in the meeting yesterday, we will use the name Bloom for the ladies products and The Hook Up for the males. The females bottle will have a flower on the front and the words will be the same color as the flower. The bottle will fade from the pinkish yellow color of the flower at the bottom to white at the top, but the flower will be centered under the title. The men's bottle will be black with a red label and white words. The wording on the bottle is explained on the sketches below. The title will be under the brand name. The words on the front describing the hook will be written right side up.

Lincoln: Can you write a quick description of the recycleable aspect of the products so that we can put it on the bottle in the back under the barcode and recycle symbol? We want them to know that they can scan the barcode to see what incentive they would get if they recycled that product.

ALSO, EVERYONE POST THEIR PICTURES ON HERE SO WE CAN PUT IT ON A SLIDE FOR THE PRESENTATION TODAY.

If there is anything else, we can talk abou that at 5pm today in the meeting.

Flower:

Sketches:
 



 


Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Kathleen Gasper


Waste & packaging partnerships | Sustainable living | Unilever Global

Waste & packaging partnerships | Sustainable living | Unilever Global


WASTE & PACKAGING PARTNERSHIPS

Given the complexity of the issues surrounding packaging and the diverse stakeholders involved, we need to work in partnership to find viable solutions.

OUR PARTNERSHIPS

With businesses in many parts of the world, it is important we understand the way waste management systems function at a local level. We are working with a range of partners to develop our understanding and identify effective solutions. Unilever is a founding member of the Sustainable Packaging Coalition, which has more than 160 members, including packaging producers, users and retailers. We are also members of EUROPEN (the European Organization for Packaging and the Environment).
We work in partnership with retailers and NGOs to explore ways of improving recycling infrastructure. Since 1992, for example, we have supported the CEMPRE waste management and recycling initiative in Brazil, which works with the ‘waste picking’ community.
‘Waste picking’ – retrieving waste that can be sold for reuse or recycling – is common in the developing world. CEMPRE is a non-profit organisation that promotes recycling, raising awareness at government and NGO level and helping workers, usually the poor and disadvantaged, who are actually engaged in waste recovery. It advises local waste or rag pickers how to set up a co-operative and has published a ‘how-to’ kit. It publishes a regular newsletter and runs a hot-line on the current price of recyclables. CEMPRE support allows vulnerable freelance pickers to form organised co-operatives that are well placed to sort, store and resell materials, reducing waste to landfill and dumps and improving workers’ lives. The success of this partnership has led to the CEMPRE model being launched in other countries on different continents.
We are also working with TIMPSE in Thailand, a similar organisation to CEMPRE, to try to replicate the success of CEMPRE. We are investigating ways to roll out this kind of approach to other countries, together with other partners.
In Brazil, our brands Omo, Rexona, Knorr and AdeS continue to work in partnership with retailer Pão de Açúcar to encourage the recycling and recovery of packaging waste. Pão de Açúcar gives customers colour-coded plastic bags when they shop at the store to help sort and bring back their waste for recycling. All items collected are donated to co-operatives, who separate, bale and sell them, generating income for more than 1,000 people. SeeReduce, reuse, recycle for more details.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Unilever Packaging

Hey all, found this video from Unilever describing Sustainable Packaging.

https://vimeo.com/21762857

Check it.

MID CRIT AND MEETING

mid crit time is 4:45 and we will be meeting as a group at 6:30 in the junior design studio

Sunday, October 21, 2012


What is plant-based plastic?

Most plastic is fossil fuel-based—made from oil or natural gas. The plastic used to make our smoothie bottles starts as sugarcane juice.
Once sugarcane is grown, the juice is extracted, fermented and distilled into ethanol. The ethanol is then dehydrated to form ethylene and polymerized into high-density polyethylene (HDPE), also known as #2 plastic.
The resulting product is virtually indistinguishable from other #2 plastic, and it's made from renewable plants that consume CO2 as they grow.

What are the environmental benefits of plant-based plastic?

Sugarcane is a renewable resource, unlike petroleum or natural gas—the sources of most plastic. Further, the very act of growing plants reduces the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) in our atmosphere.
The sugarcane-based HDPE (#2 plastic) used for our bottles offsets CO2 emissions, compared to petroleum-based HDPE, which releases CO2 into the atmosphere, contributing to global climate change. With the switch from petroleum-based plastic to plastic made from sugarcane, we reduced our CO2 emissions from our bottles by 65%. Our carbon footprint.
The sugarcane used to make our bottles is cultivated without the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs). This sugarcane is all grown in Brazil, where GMO sugarcane is prohibited by federal law. More about GMOs.

Why use sugarcane?

The technology and facilities to make plastic from plants are new and limited, and sugarcane is now the only plant being used on a large scale to make #2 plastic. We expect to someday see #2 plastic made from many different types of plants. As new technologies emerge, we'll examine them to determine which materials and processes are best for our use.

method : our packaging


Research

Trends:

Pantone has announced the women's spring colors:

Women's Spring 2013 colors are:
PANTONE 17-5641 Emerald
PANTONE 14-6011 Grayed Jade
PANTONE 16-4120 Dusk Blue
PANTONE 14-0446 Tender Shoot
PANTONE 13-0756 Lemon Zest
PANTONE 16-3520 African Violet
PANTONE 12-1008 Linen
PANTONE 19-3964 Monaco Blue
PANTONE 17-1664 Poppy Red
PANTONE 16-1360 Nectarine


Women's colors:





Men's colors:




From: http://weconnectfashion.com/fido/getarticle.fcn?&type=trends&SearchString=S/S+2013&id=737870PW0000097&start=2&tr=8


Another trend is the smell. While researching, I found that most people like a scented body wash over non scented. Though everyone has a different opinion on their favorite scent, the majority likes a clean, fresh smell over a sweet fruity smell.

Another thing to think about is exfoliation. 

Competition:



Average Prices:

Women-
Dove $8
Olay (Procter & Gamble) $7
Softsoap (Colgate-Palmolive) $5
Nivea (Belersodorf) $6
Philosophy (Philosophy Inc) $15

Men-
Axe $6
Irish Spring (Colgate-Palmolive) $6
Old Spice (P&G) $5
Gillette (P&G) $5


Let me know what else you need.


Meeting today(sunday)

Hello, i hope your fall break went well, alex, nick and I did a lot of work over the weekend, Ive been trying to keep everyone posted. I don't know what time everyone is getting back or what time you are free but we will be working in the studio from 12 until 6 at the earliest so please join us if you can, thank you

Kathleen Gasper
484-764-9383

Saturday, October 20, 2012

business students

So i talked with other groups and what they are doing is having the business students do research of current trends like colors since thats part of unilever's inspiration, both male and female. Also look at the price range of products unilever sells and then look at the price range of dove vs. axe and the price range of other companies. please post on the blog what you find, thank you

Friday, October 19, 2012

Sport Bottle for AXE

For Axe, with it's young, athletic male target market, this sports type of bottle could be interesting. This container has no moving parts, is easy to use in the shower (just squeeze) and, if tapered at the bottom, would put the straw exactly where the product ends up, making it easy to get the last drop out. Could be refillable in a bulk-buying operation and made from 100% recycled/recyclable or bio plastic. 

Meeting today

At our meeting today we were told to focus towards dove and axe. so we are looking into ideas for both thick and thin liquids at the moment

ergonomics

http://elwira-packaging.blogspot.com/2012/05/ergonomics-why-it-is-important-in.html


Ergonomics... why it is important in packaging design?


What is Ergonomics?
Ergonomics it’s about combining the science of the human body with
design to create products that look great, perform flawlessly, and fit
perfectly. It’s about fitting the users’ physical, cognitive, and emotional
needs. It may be defined as the application of scientific informations
concerning human beings to the problem of design. Ergonomics
require some kind of evidence that a satisfactory match between
product and user has been achieved.


The most important function of ergonomics in packaging design is
physical and psychological relationship between objects and the
people who use them. User has to interact with the equipment in
healthy, comfortable, and efficient manner.
Ergonomics is to make the usage of the given
product easier, more comfortable and clearer to understand.









“When simple things need pictures, labels, or
instructions, the design has failed.”
Donald A. Norman (2000,p.9)

I believe that Norman’s sentence is based on ergonomic regulations.
If the science of everyday life doesn’t communicate with the user as it
should, or directing him in wrong way I can assume the design wasn’t
ergonomically created.
I have to present the term of affordance as it refers to the perceived
and actual properties of the thing. Those fundamental properties
determine how the thing could possibly be used.
Each object has some affordances. They provide some clues to the
operation of things. For example knobs are for turning, balls are for
throwing or bouncing, glass is for seeing through and for breaking,
doors are for opening, closing and going through, etc. When the
affordances are taken advantage of, the user knows what to do just by
looking.
Affordance refers to what an object invites us to do.
However the design of the product or its packaging has to be clear that
invites the user whatever action is most sustainable and appropriate. If
you want people to carry out a specific action with a packaging, do not
rely on instruction, however clear and obvious they might be.
There are two main considerations in the design of a physical object,
its form or shape and the ergonomics of that form. The form is what
the object looks like and the story that this tells, while its ergonomics
consist of how it is designed in order to maximise user efficiency and
reduce strain.

To achieve the point above we need to familiarize with the subject of anthropometric. It is I suppose one of the most important branches of ergonomics. Anthropometric deals with body size, shape and strength. ‘Anthropo’ means ‘human’ and‘metrics’ means ‘measurements’. A general rule of ergonomics seeks to achieve the greatest possible level of comfort (or other satisfaction) for the greatest possible number of users. That’s why anthropometric is so important. To create a good design we have to know measurements of human body or just part of it. For example designing packaging for jewelry probably we need to know average measurements of the human hand.


I think for packaging ergonomics the most important part of humans 
body is a hand. Our hands interact with every packaging, we touch ,
carry, hold, open, close and grab it by our hands. Anthropometry in
case of packaging design concentrates mainly on hand measurements 
and capabilities. Through ergonomic design process the measurement 
should be taken for consideration as well as the hand movements and 
positions in particular actions.



Principles of Ergonomics in packaging design:

1. Reduce extensive force.  
Excessive force on your joints can create a potenti al for fati gue and
injury. In practical terms, the ergonomic design is to identi fy specificinstances of excessive force and think of/come across with idea/ waysto make improvements.

 

2. Minimize fatigue and static load.
Holding the same position for a period of time is known as static
load. It creates fatigue and discomfort and can interfere with work.
Ergonomics deal with that to create packaging solutions witch would
be more comfortable to don’t force your muscles or joints.


 


3. Suitable size of the package.
The packaging has to suit your hand. In this case anthropometric will
have a significant role to adapt the packaging handle to the average
person or specific audience hand. But also size of the package has to
be suitable for the products. The package has to be designed to create
unity together with the product.





3a. Appropriate Weight of the packaging according to audience and the product.
The packaging shouldn’t be heavier than the product, but only in some
cases as for example beer crate. Because the product is heavy (24
beer bottles) the crate shouldn’t be heavier then it. It will be heavy
anyway so the packaging-crate has to be the lightest as it can (plastic,
cardboard).


 


3b. Proper Height and Width of the package suitable for product and audience.
The packaging should be appropriate for human size/audience size. If
it is something which is the size of the hand it should be designed to
hold it easy. It can not be very high or long unless it meets
requirements for easy to use.

 


4. Comfortable, stable, good structural and simple shape.
Shape has significant role as well. The shape give us the ability to
hold or carry the product stable. Here as well the designers should be
based on anthropometric and narrowly the measurement of humans
hand as most packaging we hold, open, carry, by our hands. The
product/packaging has to be easy to use-show easily its affordances
without any instructions.

 


5. Easy to read Color contrast.
It seems to be not really coherent with the science of ergonomics, but
actually color is also important. Ergonomics is about making the life
easier. It is the art of design which deals with all bad, uncomfortable,
difficult to use products. It is important to provide significant contrast
between type and its background.


 


6. Font easy to read.
The same thing is with the text on the packaging. It has to be easy to
read, simple otherwise it won’t be ergonomic as we will not be able
to read it.






My research is based mainly on books:


  1. Norman A. D. (2000) The Desogn of Everyday Things, New York: Basic Book
  2. Pheasant S. (1999) Bodyspace - Antropometry, Ergonomics and the Design of Work, London: Taylor&Francis
  3. Pheasant S. (1987) Bodyspace - Ergonomics-standards and guidelines for designers, Suffolk: British Standards Institution