
Packaging Design for Educational Content
Conceptual packaging designs created for educational videos to raise awareness about misleading food packaging and ingredient transparency.
Overview
This project involved designing conceptual packaging for food and beverage products as part of an educational initiative by Satvic Movement, a health and lifestyle education platform.
The packaging designs were intentionally created to resemble familiar food categories while clearly presenting ingredient information and visual cues that encouraged viewers to question what they consume. These designs were printed and applied to real food products, which were then used as visual aids in educational videos shared across Instagram, YouTube, and in-school learning sessions.
The objective was not to promote or misrepresent brands, but to use packaging as a visual storytelling tool - helping people understand how food packaging can be misleading, how many commonly used ingredients are not meant for human consumption, and why reading ingredient labels matters more than attractive branding.
The project covered a wide range of food categories, including biscuits, namkeens, chocolates, soft drinks, nuts, energy bars, ladoos, and more, making the learning relatable and grounded in everyday consumption habits.
Category
Packaging
Client
Satvic Movement (Freelance)
Role
Graphic Designer (Packaging & Visual Communication)
Tools
Canva, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop
Timeline
5 days per batch (10+ products at a time) Project executed across 3–4 phases
Platform
Print (Packaging) and Digital (Educational Video Content)



Packaging Design for Educational Content
Conceptual packaging designs created for educational videos to raise awareness about misleading food packaging and ingredient transparency.
Overview
This project involved designing conceptual packaging for food and beverage products as part of an educational initiative by Satvic Movement, a health and lifestyle education platform.
The packaging designs were intentionally created to resemble familiar food categories while clearly presenting ingredient information and visual cues that encouraged viewers to question what they consume. These designs were printed and applied to real food products, which were then used as visual aids in educational videos shared across Instagram, YouTube, and in-school learning sessions.
The objective was not to promote or misrepresent brands, but to use packaging as a visual storytelling tool - helping people understand how food packaging can be misleading, how many commonly used ingredients are not meant for human consumption, and why reading ingredient labels matters more than attractive branding.
The project covered a wide range of food categories, including biscuits, namkeens, chocolates, soft drinks, nuts, energy bars, ladoos, and more, making the learning relatable and grounded in everyday consumption habits.
Category
Packaging
Client
Satvic Movement (Freelance)
Role
Graphic Designer (Packaging & Visual Communication)
Tools
Canva, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop
Timeline
5 days per batch (10+ products at a time) Project executed across 3–4 phases
Platform
Print (Packaging) and Digital (Educational Video Content)





