bidazzling

Case study — BDAZZLING

Foundation, pressed

Personal project, beauty packaging. A bottle sized for a compact bag, pressed for a single dose, finished so the object feels like a reason to reach for it.

Client
BDAZZLING
Year
2023
Role
Packaging & product design
Discipline
Packaging, Product, Industrial design
Read
4 min read

BDAZZLING Foundation is a self-initiated packaging study: a liquid foundation in a slim, compact bottle with a push-actuated pump, sized so the object sits flat in a makeup bag and dispenses a consistent dose in one small event. The brief was mine. The question was whether a foundation bottle could be designed around the gesture of using it, not the gesture of photographing it.

A foundation bottle spends most of its life closed, in a bag, in a drawer. It should look correct in its natural state, not just in its marketing one.

Bianca Masrsha, Product designer

The object

BDAZZLING Foundation renders. A slim rectangular bottle with a transparent outer case and a violet inner vessel, topped by a push-actuated pump. Several angles showing the flat sides, the pump cap, and the seating of the inner vessel inside the clear shell.

Personal project · beauty packaging · product renders

Why a push, not a dropper

A dropper is honest but slow: pipette, hover, squeeze, rebuild your confidence. A classic pump is fast but imprecise: the dose is whatever the pump gives you. The goal was to borrow the speed of a pump and the measured dose of a dropper, by tuning the pump stroke to a single realistic face worth of product.

  • One full press dispenses roughly the amount a typical user will blend across a full face, so the dose is the gesture.
  • The pump is recessed into a rectangular collar, so the bottle stands on any surface without rocking.
  • The inner vessel is opaque violet and the outer case is clear, so the fill level reads from outside without relying on a printed level mark.

The five concerns, in order

  1. 01/Grip

    Flat sides, pocket-sized

    The rectangular footprint (roughly 40mm across, 29mm deep) sits flat in a bag without sliding, and it reads correctly whether you pick it up from any of four sides.

  2. 02/Dose

    One press, one face

    The pump is calibrated to a single realistic dose, so the user is not asked to count presses. Repeat press is possible but rarely needed.

  3. 03/UV protection

    The case earns its opacity

    The inner vessel is pigmented (PP or tinted glass at production) to block UV and slow oxidation of the formula. The outer acrylic shell stays clear so the fill level remains visible without a printed line.

  4. 04/Close

    Press-fit cap, quiet seat

    The clear cap press-fits over the pump collar with a small tactile seat. No twist, no wandering alignment. The close is a small event.

  5. 05/Label

    Minimal, centred, legible

    A monogram, a wordmark, a product name, and a fill weight. Compliance copy lives on the side panel so the front stays clean at arm's length on a shelf.

Numbers

0 mm

Base width

flat footprint, anti-roll

0 mm

Overall height

cap on, pump seated

0 ml

Fill volume

roughly six weeks of daily use

0

Violet

on the vessel, no tint on the case

Drawings before renders

Every dimension was drawn before it was lit. The technical sheet (Packaging Foundation, Bianca Masrsha, 04 April 2023) locked the base footprint, the pump seat, the inner vessel wall thickness, and the clearance between vessel and case before any of the renders asked a material question.

Packaging Foundation orthographic technical drawing by Bianca Masrsha, dated 04/04/2023. Top, front, and isometric views of the rectangular bottle with pump, fully dimensioned.

Packaging Foundation · orthographic · Bianca Masrsha · 04 April 2023

Finish

Prototype only. Dimensions locked, materials specified. Next step is a tooling quote and a short run to check whether the pump stroke holds its calibration across a production batch, and whether the press-fit cap seats cleanly in injection-molded acrylic.