Core77 Design Award 2011: Ploom – Alex Ko, Notable for Packaging/Branding/Identity
Posted in: Core77 Design AwardsOver the next months we will be highlighting award-winning projects and ideas from this year’s Core77 Design Awards! For full details on the project, jury commenting and more information about the awards program, go to Core77DesignAwards.com
Designer: Ploom – Alex Ko
Category: Packaging/Branding/Identity
Award: Professional Notable
Designed the interaction with Ploom Pods, natural tobacco for the 21st-century. Responsible for the design of the structural packaging, graphic identity and the supporting point of purchase assets.
We’ve seen two radically different approaches to cigarette packaging this week, so Alex Ko’s Ploom Pod Packaging is particularly relevant solution to the broader issue of tobacco consumption and public perception of such:
Tobacco, I’m willing to guess, is one of the more polarizing topics one could tackle. It’s sort of like convincing your school that the class bully is now the class angel, or at the very least, the class nerd. Ploom aims to convince you of just that.
Ploom is a tobacco product for the 21st century, using technology to offer a modern alternative to smoking that takes a responsible point of view on ingredients and health. The technology consists of a pocket-vaporizer, called the model One™, and hermetically-sealed, single servings of tobacco, packed in anodized aluminum capsules called Pods™…
Vapor, not smoke, is the key distinction, as research shows that most harms associated with tobacco consumption are associated with combustion, not with tobacco or nicotine. The problem posed to the team was to design the Pod packaging, defining the experience of purchasing, carrying, and dispensing tobacco and herbal Pods.
Core77: How did you learn that you had been recognized by the jury?
I was checking my iPhone in the middle of Green Lantern. We were out for my brother’s 50th birthday.
What’s the latest news or development with your project?
Ploom continues to spread domestically and internationally. We just got a bunch of interest in South Korea!
What is one quick anecdote about your project?
As soon as I walked into a convenience store and saw the visual assault of typical cigarette displays, I both knew what we were up against and what the solution needed to feel like.
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