Colour Cosmetics — Full Make-up Range
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Real briefs. Real clients. The strategic layer your design education skipped.
Each pack contains complete briefs, a raw client brief written in the client's own voice, and a full Art Director's Analysis that tells you what it actually means.
WHAT’S INCLUDED







WHY THE ANALYSIS MATTERS
who's on the shelf and what the gap is
What you learn
- How to design a label system for 30+ shade variants that remains coherent and beautiful without becoming a spreadsheet
- What inclusive design looks like as a structural brand decision rather than a marketing position
- How to hold premium and accessible in the same visual register without compromising either
WHY DESIGNERS BUY BRANDBRIEF™ Design Briefs
You get the brief agencies never share.
You stop designing in a vacuum.
You learn to think before you open a file.
You build portfolio pieces that answer real questions.
You practice the skill no one teaches.
You understand why the good work looks the way it does.
You get a realistic project timeline.
TAKE A LOOK INSIDE

A professional design brief goes beyond a list of deliverables. The briefs that lead to strong brand identities share three things: a clearly defined competitive position, a specific understanding of who the brand is speaking to, and a strategic direction that makes visual decisions easier — not harder. This is what separates a brief that produces competent work from one that produces work worth putting in a portfolio.
Colour cosmetics packaging design has a specific technical challenge that most briefs ignore: the multi-SKU shade system. A brand with 30 foundation shades needs every product to be immediately identifiable while remaining coherent as a family and beautiful as an individual object. For a founder who spent fifteen years in the cosmetics industry and built a brand specifically because she saw genuine shade inclusion and genuine design quality being treated as mutually exclusive, the brief is unusually precise. BRANDBRIEF™ Design Brief Packs include the full Art Director's Analysis — covering how shade differentiation becomes brand strategy, what premium means in a category where premium has been used to mean exclusive, and why the most competitive shelf in beauty requires more than a good logo.
Every brief includes a full Art Director's Analysis — competitive landscape, buyer psychology, visual direction, and the strategic no-go. This is the layer that agencies build internally and never share. Here, it's included.