Appeal inside and out

New Purina dog food bag employs vivid printing to catch dog owners’ eyes, great flavor inside to attract those owners’ canines.

Pw 17097 Beneful

If an owner takes a dog into the store to buy dog food, it’s a good bet that few dogs would salivate at the sight of the Beneful bag from Ralston Purina. Although there are a couple of meaty chunks shown, most of the illustrations on the bag are vegetables such as corn, carrots, and peas, together with stalks of wheat. However, the photo vignettes are so vivid, they’re likely to catch the dog owner’s eye.

That’s the theory behind the graphic design for the St. Louis-based company’s bag. “The Purina people recognize that while canines might not find carrots and corn very appetite appealing, their owners should instantly understand that this product is formulated for owners who want to ensure a healthy diet for their dogs,” said Bill Kumke, director of package design, CheckMark Communications, Purina’s in-house design group.

Beneful, which was introduced in June, comes in four sizes, ranging from 4-lb bags to 35.2-lb. Most are pinch-bottom, multiwall paper bags supplied by Smurfit-Stone Container (Chicago, IL) from its plants in Kansas City, MO, and Louisville, KY.

The smaller sizes use two paper plies (41# outer and 50# inner) that are separated by a barrier film web. The outer paper layer is clay-coated and treated with a grease-resistant compound, says Tim Wilhoit, general manager for Smurfit’s Louisville plant.

Along with the bright white clay-coated print surface, Beneful’s product characteristics necessitated some changes in the typical multiwall paper bag structure. “For this particular formula, our packaging research and development department did extensive testing,” pointed out Mike Day, packaging deployment manager. “That’s because we have both hard and soft, dry and moist pieces in the product.”

To improve the oxygen barrier, the converter recommended a 2.2-mil layer of vitamin-E-modified high-density and linear low-density polyethylene film from Pliant Corp. (Schaumburg, IL). It replaces a thinner substrate used in most bags for dry dog foods. The addition of vitamin E provides extra protection against oxidation of the fat in the meaty particles, while HDPE provides a good moisture barrier for the dry pieces.

Nutrition is key

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