Expert’s Opinion

Brands bring festive labels and packaging to life

Several industry experts discuss the importance of balancing tradition and innovation with holiday packaging.

Author Image

By: Greg Hrinya

Editor

As the year draws to a close, festive packaging awakens. It is a season where every ribbon, every embossed pattern, and every shimmer of metallic foil carries the promise of delight, and the delicate weight of expectation. Crafting the perfect holiday experience is no longer just about vibrant reds and familiar greens; it’s about balancing nostalgia with novelty, playfulness with sophistication, and cultural sensitivity with universal joy.

From whimsical shapes that transform everyday products into magical gifts, to tactile, hand-crafted textures that evoke warmth and comfort, brands are exploring a landscape where creativity and strategy intertwine. Inclusivity, sustainability, and technology now sit alongside tradition as guiding stars, ensuring that every advent calendar, confectionery box, or seasonal gift set feels both enchanting and meaningful.

Long before the first snow falls or the scent of mulled wine drifts through the air, the magic of festive labels and packaging begin to take shape. For many brands, this work doesn’t happen overnight. The process often starts 12-18 months in advance, a meticulous rhythm of trend audits, sketches, prototypes, and strategic refinement that gradually evolves into the seasonal offerings that eventually grace store shelves. This early groundwork allows designers to anticipate consumer moods, explore emerging aesthetics, and create concepts that balance innovation with the comforting familiarity expected during the holidays.

Capturing seasonal magic

As Claire Hoe, design director at Sun Branding, observes, “I think it’s becoming more and more about people wanting to craft again. There’s also the advantage of being money-conscious and actually able to make things yourself.”

Yet capturing that seasonal magic is no straightforward task. The landscape has shifted in recent years; the impact of traditional TV advertising, once the cornerstone for iconic campaigns from retailers like John Lewis and Marks & Spencer, has softened. “Some of them have got it wrong,” Hoe notes. “Being sensitive to what’s happening while still delivering a positive message is really hard to get right.”

In an era of uncertainty, attempts to create a “big Christmas” can feel discordant if the audience is not in the headspace for celebration. Seasonal packaging must walk a fine line between spectacle and sensitivity, creating delight without overwhelming, and excitement without appearing tone-deaf.

Lisa Cain, European technical account manager, Pan European Sales, Food, Confectionery, Premium Drinks, reinforces this point: “Consumers want genuine warmth. We’re seeing more hand-drawn graphics, imperfect lines, and packaging that looks boutique. Not everyone’s knitting their own gift tags, but there’s a craving for designs that feel like someone thought about it. Done right, this aesthetic gives mass-market packs a shot of intimacy.”

Balancing tradition and innovation

This careful balancing act manifests across campaigns, from early Halloween launches to Christmas itself. In the US, Halloween ranges now appear as early as June, a momentum that seamlessly carries through to the festive season. Hoe explains, “Seasonal packaging is huge, both in look and feel, and offers opportunities for unexpected formats, playful approaches, and giftable products.”

The opportunity for creativity is further heightened by technology, which allows brands to integrate playful, interactive, or limited-edition elements in ways that feel novel yet still aligned with the brand’s core identity.

Steve Parkhouse, key account director at Curtis Packaging, elaborates on how this interplay between tradition and innovation shapes the industry. “We’re seeing bold colors, simplified designs, and patterned graphics feature strongly, creating a handcrafted yet festive look. Material choices vary. Some brands favor a crafty, uncoated feel, while others incorporate subtle metallics or sparkles to add seasonal cheer without losing the artisanal appeal.”

Beyond aesthetics, strategic considerations are key. “Traditional Christmas snowflakes and similar stereotypical elements are being replaced by more subtle branding devices to firstly not call out ‘Christmas’ too much, but also to facilitate ‘all-year-round’ gifting sales, so it’s not a case of fire sale at the end of the ‘season’,” says Parkhouse.

Packaging today must simultaneously signal festivity, reinforce brand values, and serve practical commercial objectives, from extending the selling window to supporting e-commerce and DTC channels.

Cain adds, “The brands that get it right are the ones that read the room. You can still be bold without being tone-deaf. The most memorable campaigns balance joy with relevance, acknowledging global context, local pressures, and cultural nuance. The brands that ignore this, or default to cliché, often land somewhere between forgettable and off-key. Big Christmas still works, but only when the heart of the message hits home.”

The art of festive storytelling

Hunter Luxury adds another dimension, focusing on foresight, creativity, and the balance between consistency and innovation.

“To design for Christmas 2027 is to embrace strategic foresight, blending creativity with discipline. The packaging of the future must tap into consumer behavior and become part of the experience itself – a tactile, beautiful, meaningful extension of the brand story,” explains Paul Hamilton, head of sales and marketing at Hunter Luxury. This perspective translates directly to seasonal design: the most compelling festive packaging combines familiarity with a touch of the unexpected, striking a balance between brand continuity and originality.

Designing for a Christmas yet to come requires anticipating the tastes and expectations of consumers who do not yet exist. The best festive packaging achieves this by being both coherent and playfully reinterpretive each season, delivering delight while maintaining consistency and technical precision.

Cain comments, “There’s still plenty of red and gold on shelf, but more brands are ready to disrupt. Pop-ups, pull-tabs, nested reveals, and chaos packaging – anything that turns a pack into a bit of theater is fair game. Consumers want an experience, not just a box. Tradition might set the tone, but it doesn’t dictate the shape, and some of the best packs this year twist the familiar into something new.”

The art of festive packaging is ultimately an exercise in anticipation, patience, and precision. Months of research, creative exploration, and collaborative iteration culminate in products that are beautiful, functional, and emotionally resonant. Every decision, from color to texture, from narrative to structure, is a deliberate step toward a carefully orchestrated consumer experience. It is not a process of instant magic but of slow, attentive preparation, where every layer of detail builds toward the cumulative effect of delight, nostalgia, and celebration.

Keep Up With Our Content. Subscribe To Label and Narrow Web Newsletters