Vodka served at this art gallery

In the premium spirits category, Luctor shows Dutch heritage through extravagant decorating of Vincent Van Gogh vodkas, gin and a liqueur. Gallery graphics require 16 colors involving suppliers in five European countries.

David Van de Velde (shown above) could be called the 'curator' of the Vincent Van Gogh line of spirits. The vodka bottles (right
David Van de Velde (shown above) could be called the 'curator' of the Vincent Van Gogh line of spirits. The vodka bottles (right

David Van de Velde’s Dutch heritage continues to be used to great advantage in the spirits business. He claims to be responsible for bringing Ketel One vodka from Holland and making it successful in the United States. After trying to “retire,” Van de Velde is at it again as president of Luctor Intl., Reno, NV, the company responsible for a new line of spirits aimed specifically at the U.S. market.

But if Van de Velde is Dutch-centric, he’s also very packaging-centered. In fact, it took Luctor more than two years to secure the rights to the Vincent Van Gogh name and artwork that decorate Luctor’s bottles, and to oversee development of the processes used for decorating and corking these containers.

“You have to come out with a ‘wow’ concept,” he bubbles. “First off, you have to have a ‘wow’ name. Second, we had to come up with a ‘wow’ package design. Finally, you have to have a ‘wow’ product in the package.” Eventually, Van de Velde worked with CLM Design (Reno, NV) to create the graphics for the various bottles. Those graphics were executed in Europe, all under the guidance of Thijssens Packaging (Amsterdam, the Netherlands), Luctor’s packaging consultant. Identification of individual suppliers was not provided; the company prefers to keep them confidential.

“The graphic design was the concept of our president,” says Roseanne Hardenbrook, vice president of marketing at Luctor. “The design was his idea. The first product was our Van Gogh Gin, which came out in the fall of ’99. In the foreground is one of Amsterdam’s most famous bridges over a canal. Through the front window of the etched bottle, you see all the houses and buildings around the canal in a panoramic view.”

That same “window” concept is also used for this year’s line of Vincent vodkas: a regular vodka and two flavored versions, Oranje (orange) and Citroen (a lemon flavor, not the French automobile). In a slight variation, Luctor recently introduced Starry Nights, an orange-flavored liqueur whose blue product color helps form the basis for the reproduction of the painting on the bottle.

Securing the rights

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