• Sydney-based studio Percept has designed the branding and packaging for Mizzica, a crema liqueur inspired by Sicilian traditions and developed for the Australian market.
Source: Percept
    Sydney-based studio Percept has designed the branding and packaging for Mizzica, a crema liqueur inspired by Sicilian traditions and developed for the Australian market. Source: Percept
Close×

Sydney-based studio Percept has designed the branding and packaging for Mizzica, a crema liqueur inspired by Sicilian traditions and developed for the Australian market.

According to Percept, the packaging centres on a minimal wrap-around label and contemporary wordmark designed to anchor the range while allowing flavour and colour accents to differentiate each variant. Strong contrast and a clear visual hierarchy were used to support shelf visibility, while typography was designed to balance brand expression with Australian regulatory requirements.

The label, Percept adds, delivers product information and brand storytelling from front to back, and was designed to work across retail shelves, online channels and potential gift formats. Vetroelite supplied the bottles and the labels were printed by Architeam Studio Associato in Italy.

Christal Zamanos, designer at Percept who led this project, said, “The design strategy positions Mizzica as a contemporary expression of Italian celebration. It honours tradition while speaking clearly to the present, allowing flavour and colour to take the lead while the wordmark anchors the range.”

The branding system was designed to work across multiple flavours while maintaining a consistent identity.

Mizzica draws on Sicilian crema liqueur traditions and is positioned as a drink intended to be enjoyed after meals. The branding references Italian lifestyle cues while presenting the product in a format aimed at contemporary consumers.

Packaging News

Industry leaders have renewed calls for national packaging reform, warning that Australia's manufacturing resilience, recycling investment and sovereign capability remain vulnerable without policy action to create demand for locally recycled content and provide a more level competitive playing field.

Australia's emerging soft plastics recycling infrastructure is ready to process significantly more material, according to Soft Plastic Stewardship Australia, which has launched a three-month campaign aimed at boosting consumer returns and strengthening domestic supply of recycled resin.

PKN’s latest print issue is hitting desks and landing in inboxes, bringing readers up to speed with the people, technologies and innovations shaping packaging, printing and processing across Australia and beyond.