Archive for the ‘packaging’ tag
rose colored wine bottle turned glasses
best chef, best packaging
Remove Deodorant Stains with a Foam Brick [Video]
Deodorant stains are never fun to deal with, but if you can catch them before they dry into your fabric you can remove them with a simple foam packaging brick. More »
Apple interested in wireless power to charge devices on store shelves
Apple has shown interest in wirelessly powering and charging its portable devices, allowing products like the iPhone and iPad to be powered up while sealed in packaging and on display at a retail store.
the beauty of tape
These absolutely stunning sculptures, by well-know street sculptor Mark Jenkins, are made up of only clear packaging tape and their surroundings! Who knew tape could be so purdy?
Five Things You Buy That Don’t Actually Work The Way You Think [Shopping]
We’ve learned to be skeptical of product packaging and not always trust the claims it makes, but our hopefulness sometimes gets the best of us. Here are five products you’ve likely used, or maybe even purchase regularly, that don’t yield the results you may expect. More »
Book details Apple’s ‘packaging room,’ Steve Jobs’s interest in advanced cameras
Apple has a secret room devoted solely to designing product packaging and what users experience when opening a new product, a new book reveals. It also gives details on Steve Jobs’s interest in a startup camera company before he died late last year.
snookums cat food



This cat food is named Snookums. I don’t even own a cat and would want to buy this for the name and packaging alone.
Would this dfferentiate it from its competitors? Yes. It cleverly captures cats and their actual attitudes towards humans (stop judging me, cans). If only brands actually did this.
A project created by designer Eric Hart.
Settlement in iTunes Gift Card class action suit offers $3.25 per customer
A settlement has been reached in a class action lawsuit involving iTunes customers who purchased songs from the online music store for $1.29 with gift cards whose packaging promised songs for only $0.99.












