And then there was the clasp. It had to be designed for multiple uses, clicking into place over the mold without tearing or crumpling. Trimming the edge of the clasp down to give it a sleek look without compromising on its functionality posed quite the challenge and really pushed the boundaries of what was thought possible with molding. But as Allen says, “It's great to be a part of the process and pushing the boundaries. It’s one of the biggest things we like to do here at James Cropper.”
The clasp also gives another sensory experience of the packaging. Not so long ago, several members of the marketing department sat around a table and spent half a day helping to put the wrap around the Bruichladdich Eighteen. When it was done just right, the clasp would give a click as it closed around the bottle. It’s one of those experiences so oddly satisfying, that throughout the morning whispered exclamations of “Yessss!” would bubble up from the group.
That click was consciously designed. It was a lot of work to get the tooling just right to get that effect, but as Fisher says, “It's not just a wrap that goes round and we just stick that on. It's the feeling that you get when that noise, when it clicks in and you know the sound of the feel. Then it feels secure. It's locked. It's in place. It really engages as another touch point and steps it up a level from being simply a wrap just holding it in place.”
With nearly 200 years of experience and a relentless drive for cutting-edge innovation and sustainability, James Cropper is well positioned to lead the packaging industry into the future. Along with their cup cycling program and investigations into recycling luxury clothing fibres, they’re exploring alternative types of fibres, such as coconut husk, hemp, pineapple and seaweed. The key is in finding fibres that add value to the paper product (through strength, for example) and can either be sustainably cultivated or, even better, taken out of a waste stream and put to new use.
The results of this combination of innovation and design are some of the most eye-catching products on the shelf. “When it came to launching these prestige whiskies, we set out to prove that sustainable packaging can be simultaneously stripped back and beautiful,” says Gareth Brown, Bruichladdich’s Global Marketing Director. “Rather than adding elaborate packaging or unnecessary weight we have chosen to subtract, letting form follow function to rethink what modern luxury can, and should, be.”
All of this progress is only possible because of the collaboration amongst businesses all focused on sustainable innovation: manufacturers and designers making conscious choices about where and how they source their materials; businesses seeking out values-aligned purveyors. And of course, all of this depends on consumers supporting those businesses.
Global trade isn’t likely to decline anytime soon and neither is our need for packaging. Barring an apocalypse and a return to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, we’ll be dependent upon our neighbours near and far for our consumables for a long time yet.
So, the next time you make a purchase, whether it’s a single malt Scotch whisky or a new battery charger entombed in thick nigh-on indestructible plastic, think about all the connections that went into that packaging. How many human and ecological relationships were involved? How much of that packaging is even necessary, and how many positive human and ecological relationships can come out of the waste it produces? Like all of our relationships, the ones we choose to invest in are the ones that grow.