Monthly Archives: August 2010

Caligo Wine Packaging

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Late autumn in Spain’s Alt Penedes, in the hills outside of Barcelona. The annual harvest that yields the area’s dry red and white wines has past weeks before. Yet there are still white grapes on the vine. They’re beyond ripe. Morning mists blow in off the sea. A fungus forms on the grapes. It begins to suck the moisture out of the fruit. The grapes appear to be decaying. For the DG Viticultors vineyard and winery, everything is going exactly as they’d hoped.

DG Viticultors produces three white desert wines, or “mist wines,” from these grapes. The late harvest enables the grapes to over-ripen, beyond the sweetness levels necessary to make dry wines. The fungus, called botrytis, or “noble rot,” then draws moisture from the grapes, further concentrating their flavor and sweetness. The resulting wine, under the best circumstances, balances sweetness with acidity, and offers pronounced flavors of ripe peach and toasty honey. This centuries-old winemaking process is thought to have originated in Tokaj, in Hungary, and continues today with the celebrated Sauternes wines of France and the Beerenauslese and Trockenbeerenauslese wines of Germany.
It’s a fascinating process. So much so that in designing the identity for DG Viticultors’ three desert wines, we decided to print the story of these wines’ creation directly on the bottles.

Using the entire face of the bottle, we had room to screenprint in Catalan, Spanish, and English. While the winemaking process is the same for DG Viticultors’ three wines—Petit Caligo, Caligo, and Caligo Essència—the difference is in their amounts of residual sugar and alcohol. Three shades of gold, on the labels and matching capsules, differentiate the wines. Our work also includes individual cases and four-bottle cases for Caligo.

Caligo Essència, the sweetest and most intense of the three, won the third prize in this year’s Vinoble Jerez, a biannual wine fair dedicated to the fortified, desert, and natural sweet wines.

Design by Base Design | Source :: Packaging World

Paraje de los Bancales

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Paraje de los Bancales is the first wine of Bodegas Pastrana within the DO Arribes del Duero. This wine is elegant, different and with an unusual class. It was important that the image of this came out well, sober and elegant with an unusual class. I chose a one colour approach using lines and geometric elements simulating a wedding tie. All packaging will consist of an individual box of 3 and 6 bottles.

Designed by Javier Garduño | Source :: Lovely Package

Nomeolvides Wine Labels

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Inspired by the nostalgic surrealism of Magritte and our secret (or not so) need to transcend, especially from memory, was born Nomeolvides name and design, the line of foreign market entry level of trail. There is some romance, solitude and a muffled cry, combined with the bright colors that define each varietal, a packaging component, funny and profound. The text of the counter says, "Sometimes love is so ephemeral and eternal remembrance … we want to retain it, do it for a moment forever .." Wine is not just a memorable moment of shared pleasure.

Designed by Guillo Milia | Source :: Packaging of the World

Jeannie Cho Lee Is the Asian Wine Market’s Own Julia Child

Gary V.'s got nothing on Jeannie C.

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The wine and Asian food pairings Jeannie Cho Lee dreams up are about as diverse as her background: Master of Wine from the Institute of Masters of Wine in London and a Master of Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Born in Seoul, raised in the U.S., and now residing in Hong Kong where she's raising four children, Lee is the first Asian Master of Wine, and at the heart of the explosion of the Asian wine market. (Christie’s recently announced that the prominent Korean business house, SK Networks, will be auctioning off over 100 cases of premiere wines in Hong Kong next month.) Her work is, in many ways, an exercise in targeted messaging — that is, how to present her fusion sense of wine culture to an Asian audience that has its own customs and rituals and yet is less familiar with what she was exposed to growing up in the West.

It’s entrepreneurs like her that gnaw at your brain when you're questioning whether to pursue your ultimate dream or not. I mean, really, switching from public policy to fancy food and wine? We’ve all been at that point, the crossroads between practicality and creativity, and thanks to Lee we’ve got one more success model to look up to. And oh yeah, we get to enjoy her awesome recipe, wine, and restaurant suggestions as well. (Take a look at her blog for more on that). Without further ado, FastCompany.com presents to you Master Lee and the inside scoop on how she carved out a niche market for herself in crowded Hong Kong.

Source :: Fast Company

Amelia Park Wines Packaging Design

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Amelia Park Wines created in 2009, produces exceptional wines from one of Western Australia’s most renowned winemaking regions, by one of the of the country's most awarded winemakers.

Glasfurd & Walker worked with Amelia Park Wines to develop a brand that reflected their passion for craft and tradition with a dedication to producing only top quality wines.

Designed by Glasfurd & Walker | Source :: Packaging of the World

The Design Business Bottle

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The “DESIGN BUSINESS BOTTLE” was made to capture the essence of our business in connection with the client's business, and that's why we designed a bottle with 2 necks: one for us, and one for the client, after all aren't we all drink from this business?

And the story is like this: we thought: “Let's make a gift for every contract we sign…let's make a good wine bottle”, and we did: the bottle has 2 necks covered by 2 glasses: one written “OUR BUSINESS” and the other: “YOUR BUSINESS”, because, as a client, you put a little of your business in our business, and in the end you will enjoy the sweet wine inside.

Designed by Ampro design consultants | Source :: Packaging of the World

Vinkara Wine Packaging

Vinkara Wine Packaging

Introducing a new grape and region to an overcrowded marketplace requires a different approach to bottle design. Small and simple design decisions created something that was unexpected, playful and light-hearted. This approach establishes an instant dialogue with the viewer, makes it stand apart on the shelf, and accurately describes the taste and lightness of the wine itself.

Designed by Ned Wright | Source :: Lovely Package

Peregrine Wines of New Zealand: Awards-Winning Wines, Architecture, Philanthropy

Peregrine Wines of New Zealand

What is this? And where is it?

Actually, it is not a secret defense weapon in the US Air Force arsenal, but upon approaching it, it does look numinous and otherworldly. It is actually the Peregrine Winery, situated in Gibbstown, New Zealand, on the famous Central Otago Wine Road, a road that takes the oenophile 20 minutes outside Queenstown, NZ on a great tasting trip, beginning with Peregrine.

Before discussing the wine, it is important to mention this architecture's many awards, the most recent being the New Zealand Supreme Architectural Award. Judges from UK magazine The Architectural Review like it too, placing it, in 2004, in the top five of its annual emerging architecture awards. The jury described the Winery as "an elegant blade of light [that] contrasts with the rugged and sublime natural landscape.

But Chris Kelly, the architect, described the building in a more avian manner: "It was recognized early on that the building would be important in reinforcing the Peregrine wine brand, so the changing roof gradient was inspired by old images freezing the kinetic rotation of a bird in flight. The roof is evocative of the majesty the Peregrine or native falcon has as it glides on the thermal uplifts off the heated land."

However it is interpreted, it is also on DesignCrave's 2009 list of the Ten Architectural Wonders Of The Wine World, for among other things, its inventive handling of space and light.

Continue reading Peregrine Wines of New Zealand: Awards-Winning Wines, Architecture, Philanthropy.

By Susan Kime | Source :: www.luxist.com