The first design was the children's packaging, a character was created and bright colours used to make the piece fun and playful. The hamster can be seen eating spaghetti, there will be a small cut out window so that you can see the pasta through the box. The typeface used is fun and childlike and the information has been highlighted in a way consistent with other children's packaging.
These are some initial ideas for the male packaging. Using colours associated with men variants could be made. Type is bold and capitalised to show strength and the packaging is kept quite basic to show no nonsense.
Above are the female designs. The colours once again are supported by research on female stereotypes. Shapes have been used to create some feminine looking patterns and the typeface is delicate and thin.
For the neutral packaging there was a bit more leeway with the design but initially the packaging had to show ideas. Either keep it simple or make the design a bit more abstract. Colours and type can be based on research and the shapes also follow this. The design as a whole should stay quite basic with nothing too fancy on.
After sending the designs to peers they were critiqued. The favoured designs are above and once printed were send again.
The reasoning for these designs to be chosen were based on the initial thoughts from peers on what best stereotypes the different audiences. The neutral packaging had the most variants and the piece above was chosen based on the face it stayed mostly neutral using basic colours and shapes to explain what the product was. After printing the male and female packaging was questioned. The female looked a little too much like a perfume of beauty product so new designs will be mocked up. The male packaging looked too close to the design of some specsavers products based on the colour and the design as a whole. There were no issues with the children's packaging and was quite often the favourite design.































