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Design should never stop at the screen, because it isn't done at the screen. Print, look, evaluate, refine, repeat. Then think about paper, presentation, environment, context and keep thinking until there is nothing left to think about—except, of course, "wow, thats great."

 

Lucky Tee Golf Tee Packaging

A whole new way to present golf tees: in an appealing package.

If you golf, you’ve probably seen the packaging most golf tees come in, it’s a small plastic bag with a card stapled up top and a hole so it can neatly hang on a peg in the pro shop. When it came to Lucky Tee’s all maple golf tees, the norm just wouldn’t do.

For this project, the client wanted something fresh and new. Something to set their superior product apart from the zip-loc baggies. This package was the solution they were looking for. The package takes up no more room on the pegboard than the bagged tees, and it can also be set on a shelf, making it easy to merchandize.

Completed April 2007

Designer Shay Spalding helped with concept and I saw the project through revisions, and manufacturing.

Filed under: Packaging, Print Design,

 
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