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Dog Food Carton is ‘Easy Like a Sunday Morning’

D2C company Sundays Dog Food chooses cereal carton-style box for its air-dried pet food, leaning in to the nostalgia of the format with its graphics and brand strategy.

According to Sundays' co-founders, the food is designed to be served with the same ease of pouring a bowl of cereal, which they say is ‘easy like a Sunday morning
According to Sundays' co-founders, the food is designed to be served with the same ease of pouring a bowl of cereal, which they say is ‘easy like a Sunday morning

The inspiration behind the branding for new Sundays air-dried dog food has several layers, as does the packaging structure itself. In particular, say co-founders of the direct-to-consumer company Sundays Food for Dogs, Inc. Michael Waxman and veterinarian Dr. Tory Waxman, “Sundays are usually a day where pet parents can spend a relaxing day at home with their dogs, and we want every day to feel like that. Additionally, the food is designed to be served with the same ease of pouring a bowl of cereal, which we say is ‘easy like a Sunday morning.’”


See: First Pet Food Brand Joins Loop


The start-up company began as many new better-for-you emerging brands have, by creating their own product after failing to find one among the preservative-laden products dominating the market. As the Waxmans relate, when their dog Mabel got sick, they “became obsessed with finding the best dog food: something healthier than kibble, but easier than home-cooked foods.” They add, “When we couldn’t find it, we made it.

The ready-to-eat food is sold in three box sizes—40, 72, and 144 oz—decorated in a sunny yellow with a photo of the Waxmans' dog Mabel.The ready-to-eat food is sold in three box sizes—40, 72, and 144 oz—decorated in a sunny yellow with a photo of the Waxmans' dog Mabel.”Sundays dog food, which promises “Cleaner Ingredients, Cleaner Bowls,” uses all-natural, human-grade ingredients and is devoid of chemical additives and synthetic ingredients, instead using an air-drying method that gently dehydrates food to preserve nutrients and flavor while killing germs. The ready-to-eat food is sold in three box sizes—40, 72, and 144 oz—decorated in a sunny yellow with Mabel’s photo. The carton, supplied by Belmark, is made from a thin corrugated material, inside of which is an oxygen-sealed, square-bottom film bag with a hook-and-loop closure from Oliver Inc. that holds the shelf-stable product. Says Michael Waxman, the translucent white color of the bag was chosen to provide a clean look and to allow the customer see when they’re running low on product

The concept for the box, Michael Waxman adds, “has a few layers to it.” He explains, “The main inspiration is that since our customers treat their dogs like family members, we thought the cereal box was a fun wink to the nostalgia of what we ate as kids. Another reason is that all of our food is going into shipping boxes anyway, so a box shape helps to protect the food and ship it more efficiently.”

The choice of a bright yellow background was driven by a fun bit of trivia known to Dr. Waxman. “Dogs are partially color blind; they can only see on the blue-yellow spectrum, which means they can only really see yellows, blues, and greys,” she says. “It made yellow an obvious choice for our primary brand color, since dogs can see it, and it underscores the ‘sun’ part of the word ‘Sundays.’”


See: Global Pet Food Market Surpassed $94.6 billion in 2019


Sundays partnered with branding agency Bondfire to develop their brand strategy, naming, and identity system. Packaging graphics include the Sundays wordmark designed with a subtle arc, which references the sun, a dog bowl, and even a dog collar. Because the cereal boxes themselves are nostalgic Dr. Waxman says Bondfire and Sundays leaned into that. “The greyscale dog image is an homage to classic cereal box designs, particularly Wheaties,” she says. “Word games on the back are also references to 20th century kids’ cereals."

Word games on the back of the boxes are references to 20th century kids’ cereals.Word games on the back of the boxes are references to 20th century kids’ cereals.To reinforce the idea of a relaxing Sunday morning, Sundays ships a consumer’s first order with a newspaper, and the box itself features licensed cartoons from The New Yorker magazine. Says Michael Waxman, “Our message is that by feeding your pup such a healthy and easy food, every morning can feel like an easy Sunday.”

Sunday dog food in a beef variety is available through the company’s website and is sold D2C as single orders or by subscription, shipped in a roll-end front-tuck corrugated box. The Waxmans say they will be releasing a chicken variety soon and have plans to sell offline—a strategy that was delayed from 2020 to 2021 due to the pandemic.

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