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built for the call of the wild

When we first looked at Yukon Gear, what stood out wasn’t what they were trying to add to the category, but what they were intentionally leaving out.

Identity, Packaging, Retail Packaging, Retail

An aerial view of a large wave in the ocean.

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They had a clear point of view from the start. This wasn’t about overbuilt features or technical storytelling. It was about giving people the gear they actually need to get outside. Simple, reliable, and accessible.


The disconnect was in how that thinking showed up on shelf. The hunting and outdoor equipment category is crowded and often overwhelming, filled with dense information and competing claims. Yukon Gear had a much more straightforward philosophy rooted in functionality over complexity, but their packaging wasn’t communicating that with the same clarity. Our role was to bring that mindset forward and make it visible.

An aerial view of a large wave in the ocean.

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We approached the system by stripping things back. Every decision came down to usefulness.

If an element didn’t help someone understand the product quickly, it didn’t belong. That shift created a clear direction. Instead of layering on features and messages, we focused on hierarchy, legibility, and intent.

A group of women are sitting at a market selling vegetables.
A restaurant with tables and chairs in front of a counter.
An aerial view of a large wave in the ocean.

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We built a packaging system that prioritizes immediate understanding. The product is clear, the purpose is clear, and the key features are easy to find. Typography was chosen for its clarity and legibility. Colour was used for contrast and consistency. Photography was treated with depth and shadow to give the product presence without relying on heavy graphics. Each panel was structured to guide the eye naturally, creating a system that consistently works across all packaging formats.

Three women wearing conical hats are selling tomatoes at a market.
A woman wearing a conical hat is riding a bike down a busy street.
An aerial view of a large wave in the ocean.

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The new brand and packaging design conveys a dependable and practical feel. It works for someone with years of hunting experience and for someone just getting started. That balance was important because the brand is built for both. Our objective wasn’t to amplify it with more noise, but to support it with clarity. The final packaging system does exactly that. It projects confidence, communicates what matters, and lets the product be the hero.

A room with tables and chairs and a red white and blue wall.

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