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Who could ever imagine that that a well-known Soviet product would be in a great demand nowadays. Moreover, our customer claims it’s surprisingly popular with children, whose age causes the mere fact that any knowledge about the USSR will flash in their mind at least 3 or 5 years later. Thus, taking into consideration all the circumstances for these long and thin pastries, the image for its packaging should reach two goals. The first one might refer to children and show them somewhat picturesque fairy-tale “tasty” scene, that should urge asking their parents for a purchase. The second one claims natural and useful characteristics of the product for parents, who have been prohibiting all those tasties and and sweets for their children lately. The first for-children-goal was solved with the help of the custom-built “straw” house, rather neat and tasty on the first glance. By the way, that’s good the picture doesn’t show all the means, it has been accomplished by:) actually food-stylists know many ways how to picture food so it would have delicious image, but they often use disgusting methods for that… The second goal was reached by the ruraly-imaged wraith of a cart, almost melting in the September haze, used to bring to life the scenery of some Penn-timed New England field with substantial harvest, those Cooper characters — just all the parts of that early XIX century scenery. Such a scenery often shows neat rivers in the bloody-red sunset with a mild misty steam above the water mirror. It looks like a deep contrast to the furious steam above the boiling cattle, that means that tea time has come and in a few moments a terrace captured scenery of mighty Autumn nature will accompany cozy tea ceremony with sweet jam and fresh tasty backed straws. |
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