Having sustainability as a core mission, Noelle Roth and Kinley Winnaman design eco-friendly wine packaging lowering dramatically carbon emissions without sacrificing design elegance

Los Angeles, California, USA

Founded on a mission to create eco-friendly wines with uncompromising quality and design, Noelle Roth Studio and Kinley Danger’s Juliet Eco-Magnum packaging disrupts the boxed wine category with their recyclable packaging, made from renewable materials.

Juliet’s Eco-Magnum has set the new standard for high-quality, recyclable containers as it is composed of a 100% recyclable paperboard outer.

Juliet Eco-Magnum

For all the above reasons, the project has been awarded a 2023 Good Design Award by The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Center for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.

Juliet Eco-Magnum produces 84% ​​lower carbon emissions than traditional glass wine bottles.

Juliet Eco-Magnum

Each Eco-Magnum packaging contains 10 glasses of delicious wine which stays fresh for four weeks after opening. As the leading luxury glass-free wine, you can enjoy Juliet just about anywhere.

Juliet has a free recycling program if plastics are not accepted by the local recycling program to ensure the inner plastic pouches are properly recycled.

Juliet Eco-Magnum

Project: Juliet Eco-Magnum
Designers: Noelle Roth Studio and Kinley Danger
Lead Designers: Noelle Roth and Kinley Winnaman
Manufacturer: Paper Tube Co.

April design news: the history of hi-fi, the future of energy and a pizza watch | Life and style

Qhis month’s design news is pretty nostalgic. Jonny Trunk’s wonderful history of hi-fi catalogs reminds us of the world before downloads and the launch of boutique Granny Takes a Trip brings back 60s psychedelia. And, as the new exhibition at Vitra Museum shows, looking to the past for answers to modern problems may well be the best solution.


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The best design comes to Milan

L’Integrale magazine. Photograph: Salone del mobile

April sees the annual design fest of Salone Del Mobile, Milano, the Italian trade show that brings the design world’s biggest brands together. This edition focuses on kitchen and bathroom design – with a special focus on technology that will change the future of cooking.

There’ll be an exhibition co-curated by six international food magazines and featuring artists, designers and chefs who will explore the cultural significance of food. Contributing publications include Italian gastronomy magazine L’IntegraleBritish title the Linseed Journal and the Portuguese art/food platform Farta. Another highly anticipated event at the Salone was the installation “A Thinking Room” by film-maker David Lynch. He has previous experience of this world since he designed and made furniture for his 1997 film Lost Highway, and presented a collection

Watch: Bentley’s design heads on the brand’s future | Articles

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