Vial Offers a Daily Dose of Modernism

Published

A white box labeled 'vial' on a colorful background made of building blocks, with text indicating it contains a daily multivitamin, 60 capsules, to be taken once daily.
  • Presentable designed Vial’s multivitamin box as a modular, grid based system inspired by modernist art and visual order
  • Primary colors and pixel stepped typography create a coded, clinical clarity rarely seen in modern wellness branding
  • The packaging replaces cluttered supplement claims with disciplined hierarchy

I never thought that health products could collide with modernist art, but somehow, this one has come out looking more trustworthy. 

Vial’s packaging, designed by Presentable, takes compositional discipline seriously, leaning on grid structures, modular layouts, and controlled color relationships. You almost never see primary colors used in modern wellness brands, yet here it works. By applying visual order to a category defined by clutter and  claims, Vial looks engineered, calm, and weirdly collectible.

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