Ruinart’s Sustainable Moulded Fibre Packaging Tells a Story of Luxury

Published:
4 Jul 2024
It’s one of the defining images of luxury and opulence, and an image that Ruinart wanted to capture when redesigning the packaging for its champagne: clean, chic – but crucially, eco-friendly.

The definition of luxury.

A bottle of champagne, immersed in an ice bucket and wrapped in a white towel. Perhaps it’s next to a pool in the South of France. Maybe by a table in a New York restaurant.

Our in-house design team worked with Pusterla 1880 to develop sustainable, minimal packaging for Ruinart's champagne, titled Second Skin.

Moulded Fibre is a renewable and recyclable packaging solution that's the latest innovation from James Cropper.

Made from recycled fibrous pulp, the papier-mâché-like white mould envelopes Ruinart’s iconic silhouette, protecting the contents from UV rays and providing an elegant solution to packaging. The design has won countless accolades, and picked up two Pencils at this year’s D&AD awards – including a Yellow in Luxury Packaging Design.

“ "The future of design will increasingly be about telling your story through the packaging. Whether that be with your brand colour; or your brand texture; or the process of creating the product. Moulded Fibre's circular nature even means that a product could live on, and be re-used in the packaging process. There might be a certain process that a company uses that creates a waste byproduct – we could then use that byproduct as pulp in the packaging." ”
Rowan Nowell
Lead Designer at James Cropper Paper & Packaging
Ruinart has been producing champagne since 1729, making it the oldest established champagne house in the world.

We understand the importance of first impressions and conveying your brand story through packaging.

Much of the business’s success is down to the little quirks of production, such as champagne being stored in chalk cellars, or crayères. we were keen to reflect this production process in the final packaging. The Ruinart cellars keep the champagne at the perfect temperature – it’s a big part of how Ruinart stores its bottles. We tried to bring through that story in the look and feel of the packaging, and literally put that process into their customer’s hands.

The outer packaging is usually the first thing people see or touch, and in a saturated market it’s important that it instantly conveys a brand’s ethos, history, or spirit.

One of the big features of the packaging is its clasp, which fastens with a satisfying click – “a bit like when you close a car door” – and was an aspect that the team at Ruinart was keen to get absolutely right.

Sustainable does not mean compromise

We spent a lot of time looking and collaborating on the clasp, this touch point. It might be someone’s first interaction with the Ruinart brand, so they wanted it to be really positive. The design had to get the branding on there, but not at the expense of its sleek function. The click was really important for them. It was really challenging for us, but we really like being challenged.

Explore our Moulded Fibre Packaging Solution