Passion for package redesign

Hyland’s reaches outside its comfort zone to relaunch kids ointment in a sustainable paperboard dispenser.

Shown here are two ointment varieties/characters in their outer cartons, with a third version in just its colorfully overwrapped chipboard tube.
Shown here are two ointment varieties/characters in their outer cartons, with a third version in just its colorfully overwrapped chipboard tube.

Want to meet someone passionate about package design?

Say hello to Kara Errickson, an independent industrial designer who helped redesign packaging for Hyland’s, Inc.’s 4 Kids Bumps ’n Bruises® with Arnica, an ointment stick that provides natural relief of pain, swelling, bruising, and soreness for children when applied to the skin.

“I'm an industrial designer who has worked in consumer packaged goods, primarily in the personal care industry,” she notes. “That market tends to focus on the glamour and the consumer side of the experience versus the technicalities required for pharmaceutical packaging.”

It’s why Hyland’s, a maker of natural homeopathic medicines since 1903, reached out to her—they wanted “to gain a fresh perspective and take a look at recent innovations in more sustainable packaging,” she says.

Before 4 Kids Bumps ’n Bruises® with Arnica first launched in its new packaging on Target store shelves in early 2015, Los Angeles-based Hyland’s sold the product in a plastic tube within a shrink-wrapped, two-sided paperboard card.

“The packaging is what consumers see first,” shesays Errickson. “It was easy for me as a mom to put myself into the place of the consumer to perceive what they're looking at when they're standing in front of this OTC pharmaceutical category, which is flooded with hundreds of products. How would we make this stand out and catch the eye of the consumer so that we could get past that first hurdle and get the product off the shelf and into their cart?”

Packaging details

Unlike Hyland’s previous package, the new ointment tube is not made of plastic, but 100% recycled chipboardpaperboard, which Errickson, and Hyland’s, see as a more sustainable option.

The spiral-wound paperboard tube, its internal piston that allows users to push up the ointment to apply it, and an outer cap, are all supplied by Chicago Paper Tube and Can Co. After forming the tube, the company also provides the colorful label, which is made from 70 lb text-weight paper, is partially recycled, and that wraps around the tube. The label is printed commercial offset is printed digitally in four water-based colors and machine-applied to the spiral-wound tube with a food-safe, soybeanwater-based adhesive, eliminating the use of petroleum-based solvents.

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