Nutrition Facts
Greenfield/Belser Ltd., Washington, District of Columbia, 1995
Description
In 1990, new legislation charged the FDA to develop a labeling program that consumers could use to inform their dietary decisions. Three constraints governed label development. First, complex information had to be conveyed simply, in a way consumers of low-level literacy could understand. Second, poor printing quality demanded simple letterforms and graphic styling: sophisticated graphic devices and color could not be used. Finally, space was at a premium. Manufacturers who jealously guard valuable label space lobbied to have the required nutritional chart occupy the smallest possible portion of the total food label.
Collections:
Information Graphics: Design of Understanding
Repository:
Denver Art Museum
Discipline:
Information design
Format:
Information graphic, Label
Credits
- Design firm
- Greenfield/Belser Ltd.
- Art director
- Burkey Belser
- Designers
- Burkey Belser, Joe Kayser
- Client
- Food and Drug Administration
Loading...
Loading...