News

In addition, packaging includes new photography of the baked snacks. This is the first step in a larger overhaul for Hostess, with an advertising campaign slotted for 2025.
The iconic jiggly dessert just got a new look. Jell-O revealed its modern makeover with a new logo and packaging, both of which have not changed previously in a decade. The new design is meant to ...
Jell-O, the 126-year-old gelatin and pudding dessert brand, unveiled a new logo for the first time in 10 years. The rebrand includes updated packaging.
Apple’s plastic-free packaging means pack-in logo stickers are going away Pack-in Apple stickers go back at least as far as 1977’s Apple II.
Mountain Dew is bringing the "mountain" back for the first time in 15 years, with a complete packaging design overhaul meant to lean into the brand's roots. Since the last major design makeover in ...
Tapping into nostalgia, the new logo marks the return of “mountain,” which was dropped in 2009 as part of a larger rebrand of PepsiCo’s soda portfolio, which also included a refreshed look ...
Kraft Singles last had a logo change in 2018 and first approached design agency Jones Knowles Ritchie in 2022 for the new look, according to JB Hartford, the agency’s creative director.
J.M. Smucker noted that, in consumer testing, the updated logo and new packaging creative were preferred over the brand’s previous visual presentation by a 2:1 ratio, with participants ...
For over 140 years, Lyle’s Golden Syrup — a staple item in any British baker’s pantry — has featured a rather curious logo on its tin: a lion’s carcass surrounded by bees. But now, for ...
Jell-O has today revealed its first revamped logo and packaging in a decade. The 178-year-old Kraft Heinz-owned dessert maker says the rebrand ushers in a “new visual identity that positions the ...
UPDATE: Dec. 12, 2024: Design Bridge and Partners worked on Hostess’ new packaging while Sarah Anne Ward Photography assisted with the new product photography, a spokesperson shared with Marketing ...
“Mtn Dew” is getting a makeover, with the word “mountain” reappearing on cans and bottles, following a roughly two-decade-long hiatus.