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Thomas Peng thomas@thomaspeng.ca

Job — tpengdesign.com · one portfolio, die-cut
7 printed panels · flaps · 1 glue seam · EN / FR · set in Toronto

  • cut
  • score / fold
  • glue — do not print

Thomas Peng — portfolio carton
This site is one flattened box —
every project a printed panel.

Cyberus Systems · Brand Identity — printed on the carton flap Flap 05Cyberus SystemsBrand IdentityOpen flat ↓
Jotted · Brand Identity — printed on the carton flap Flap 06JottedBrand IdentityOpen flat ↓
soomoo · Brand Identity — printed on the carton flap Flap 07soomooBrand IdentityOpen flat ↓
Panel 00 · Front

Selected Work

Thomas Peng

One carton, unfolded — seven panels of considered work.

Brand, packaging, print & web — Thomas Peng, Toronto. Every project is a face of the same box. Open any panel to read it flat.

thomas@thomaspeng.ca Toronto, Canada · English / Français
Panel 01 Willo · Brand Identity · Packaging WilloBrand Identity · Packaging · E-commerceOpen flat ↓ Panel 02 BMW · Direct Mail · Automotive Retouching BMWDirect Mail · Retouching · PrintOpen flat ↓ Panel 03 Allstate · Direct Mail · Email Production AllstatePrint Production · Direct Mail · EmailOpen flat ↓ Panel 04 HearingLife · Email Modernization HearingLifeEmail Design · BrandOpen flat ↓
Bottom flap About Open flat ↓

Brand · Packaging · Print · Web

7 works · Toronto · EN / FR

English / Français

Bottom flap Contact Open flat ↓

Catalogue

Opened flat.

Each sheet below is a panel of the carton above, unfolded to reading size — the full story printed on its face.

Panel 01 — opened flat

Willo

Brand Identity · Packaging · E-commerceRole — Design & production

A cannabis edibles brand built from nothing — identity, packaging, and a direct-to-consumer presence unified into a single, coherent voice.

Willo · Brand Identity · Packaging
Panel 01 face art — Willo · Brand Identity · Packaging

When Willo launched in March 2020, the legal cannabis edibles market was crowded with brands that spoke almost exclusively to experienced consumers: hard-edged aesthetics, clinical copy, and a singular focus on potency over pleasure. The brief was to build something different — a brand that could welcome newer consumers who cared about taste and quality as much as effect.

Leading creative direction alongside marketing and business strategy, Thomas conceived and executed every touchpoint from the ground up: logo, colour palette, typography, packaging system, e-commerce website, SEO, email, and social. The brand launched at the start of the pandemic — a moment when direct-to-consumer digital infrastructure was not a channel among many, it was the entire channel.


Brand & Identity

The central problem was legibility in a category that had defaulted to either clinical minimalism or aggressive recreational energy. Willo needed to read as friendly and approachable without surrendering the premium quality signal that justified its place on the shelf.

The result was an identity built around soft, rounded letterforms and flavour-led colour — a visual language that could speak credibly to someone buying a THC gummy for the first time without condescending to them. The SKU names follow the same logic: Pleasant Peach, Wonderful Watermelon — flavour-forward, sensory, genuinely inviting. The NIGHT 200mg line extends the system toward a more considered register: the same brand DNA at a higher potency.


Packaging System

Packaging was designed as a system, not a sequence of individual decisions. Each SKU had to feel unmistakably Willo while letting its flavour character breathe, so the line could expand without fragmenting the brand.

With no existing equity to trade on, the packaging carried the full weight of first impression — communicating taste, quality, and trust to a consumer who was, in many cases, buying a cannabis edible for the first time.


Digital & Growth

The e-commerce site was the entire storefront, built with SEO as a structural consideration from the start rather than a post-launch afterthought — a deliberate choice in a category where paid advertising remained largely restricted.

Awareness was built through direct channels: SMS, email, social, and contests that rewarded early customers and generated word of mouth. Each channel held the same voice and register, keeping the brand consistent from first impression through to purchase.

Outcome

Willo grew to over $50,000 in monthly sales — built with no legacy brand, few conventional advertising channels, and a launch that landed in the same month a global pandemic began.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Panel 02 — opened flat

BMW

Direct Mail · Retouching · PrintRole — Design & production

An embedded-video-screen mailer for the 7 Series — and the retouching standard behind BMW’s marketing imagery.

BMW · Direct Mail · Automotive Retouching
Panel 02 face art — BMW · Direct Mail · Automotive Retouching

BMW’s 7 Series team needed a new way to put the car in a prospect’s hands before they ever reached a showroom. The brief was open: find a direct-mail format worth opening, and worth keeping.

That answer was a mailer built around an embedded video screen, with printed cards staged so the vehicle’s new features reveal themselves as the piece is handled. But the engagement ran wider than one object: it also covered the image retouching behind BMW’s marketing, promotional, and social materials — the everyday imagery the brand puts in front of people, finished to the same standard as the car.


The Format

A direct-mail piece competes with the recycling bin. Embedding a working video screen — rather than printing another fold-out — was a bet that a 7 Series prospect would stop for something that behaved like an object, not a brochure.

The printed cards were staged around the screen so the vehicle’s features unfolded in sequence as the recipient moved through the piece. Format, trim, fold, and screen placement were resolved together, the piece always considered as it would feel in the hand.


Retouching

Automotive photography never arrives press-ready. Across BMW’s marketing, promotional, and social imagery, each shot was retouched in post — paint response, panel geometry, reflections, ambient light — so the finished image holds against the brand’s own production standard, at the resolution large-format work demands.

The work moved between studio and environmental frames, and between channels and formats, but the discipline stayed the same: keep every image consistent with BMW’s established visual language, and let nothing pull the eye from the vehicle.

Outcome

Two sides of one standard — a mailer resolved as a single object, and a body of retouched imagery running across BMW’s channels, each finished to the level the 7 Series is sold on.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Panel 03 — opened flat

Allstate

Print Production · Direct Mail · EmailRole — Design & production

Press-ready direct mail and desktop email, built to a regulated national brand’s specifications alongside its creative team.

Allstate · Direct Mail · Email Production
Panel 03 face art — Allstate · Direct Mail · Email Production

Allstate’s materials reach policyholders at scale and carry the brand’s accountability with them, which makes production rigour non-negotiable. Working alongside Allstate’s creative team, the role was production-focused: build to spec, prepare for press, and make sure every file could move through the pipeline without revision.

This is the kind of work that doesn’t reward improvisation. Colour values, bleed, safe zones, email rendering — each constraint is fixed by the client, the printer, or the inbox. Execution is the work.


Production

The engagement covered two distinct production surfaces: desktop email layouts, and direct-mail files prepared for print. Email work required close attention to rendering discipline — clients impose structural constraints the visual design alone cannot guarantee, and a brand like Allstate demands consistency at every step. Print files asked for the same rigour in a different register: bleed, colour accuracy, and press-ready preparation aligned to a high-volume direct-mail operation.

Working inside an established creative team meant fluency in someone else’s system — adhering to brand guidelines already in place, matching file conventions already decided, and contributing output that could move forward without a handoff lag. The measure of success is plain: files that are correct, compliant, and ready.

Outcome

A body of direct-mail and email assets delivered across multiple campaigns to Allstate’s standards — accurate, on-spec, and ready.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Panel 04 — opened flat

HearingLife

Email Design · BrandRole — Design & production

A single eblast, redrawn — new hierarchy, one clear action, and a more legible path to a younger audience.

HearingLife · Email Modernization
Panel 04 face art — HearingLife · Email Modernization

HearingLife is a long-established Canadian hearing-health provider whose email programme had, over time, drifted toward the habits of an older audience: dense layouts, competing priorities, and a tone that leaned on familiarity rather than invitation.

The brief was deliberately narrow — modernize the email’s voice and format for a younger demographic without surrendering the brand’s authority. The response was equally focused: a single, documented before-and-after redesign of a core eblast.


Approach

The original layout carried the marks of email built for a different era: cluttered hierarchy, no clear resting point for the eye, and a call to action buried among competing messages. The redesign stripped the composition back to its essential job — bring the right person to a booking.

A clean, legible structure replaced the dated format, centred on a single headline — “Hearing aids made just for you” — and one unambiguous booking call to action. The intervention was precise rather than sweeping: every decision served the task of making the email feel contemporary without erasing the trust the brand had earned over decades.

Outcome

A production-ready direction — a documented, restrained modernization showing how HearingLife’s email could reach a broader audience while holding its authority.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Flap 05 — opened flat

Cyberus Systems

Brand IdentityRole — Design & production

Three layered forms in deep navy — a mark that reads as both signal and structure.

Cyberus Systems · Brand Identity
Flap 05 face art — Cyberus Systems · Brand Identity · #1B1464

Cyberus Systems is a cyber-security company, and its identity had to hold two ideas at once — protection, and the constant movement of data. The mark answers with a stacked symbol of three chevron-like bands, each offset from the last, set against a clean geometric wordmark: the symbol does the expressive work, the type grounds it with institutional weight.

The name folds the digital (cyber) into the mythological guardian (Cerberus), and the form follows — the layered bands read at once as signal waves, network layers, or shields in motion. For a security brand, legibility is the point: the mark signals vigilance and technical depth without falling back on padlocks or the usual clichés.


The Mark

The symbol is three parallel chevron bands, each stair-stepped downward to the left, generating cascading movement that never breaks into chaos. The geometry is precise — equal weight, equal spacing — which keeps the dynamism disciplined. That tension between motion and order is the mark’s central idea.

The wordmark is set in a round-cornered geometric sans that echoes the softened cuts in the symbol. Deep navy unifies both: authoritative without aggression, technical without coldness. “Systems” sits flush beneath “Cyberus” at a lighter optical weight — identity before descriptor — while the two-line stack mirrors the layered logic of the icon itself.

Outcome

A mark restrained enough to anchor a wider identity — technically rigorous without losing its edge.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Flap 06 — opened flat

Jotted

Brand IdentityRole — Design & production

A scribble made deliberate — the energy of a thought caught mid-flight.

Jotted · Brand Identity
Flap 06 face art — Jotted · Brand Identity · #F36E26

Jotted is a notebook and stationery brand, and its logotype had to feel like the thing it sells: the moment a thought gets written down. It holds two gestures in one breath — a loose, spiralling mark that reads as handwriting in motion, and a clean rounded wordmark that grounds it. The terminal period turns a fleeting note into something kept.

For a stationery brand, the mark earns its place by being about the act of writing rather than the product. The symbol is unfinished by design — a cascade of looping strokes that catch a thought before it settles — while the wordmark stays composed and assured. Together they run the whole arc of an idea, from impulse to record, which is exactly what a notebook is for.


The Mark

The symbol is a cluster of overlapping scribble-strokes in a single warm orange — not a tidy icon of a pen, but the trace the pen leaves. The looseness is deliberate; every loop slightly overruns the last, the way handwriting does when the mind moves faster than the hand.

The wordmark is set in a humanist rounded sans — soft terminals, open apertures, letterspacing generous enough to let the word breathe. The colour is identical to the symbol, unifying mark and name without a container or frame. The terminal period is the most considered choice here: it closes the word the way a period closes a sentence, and in a logotype reads as quiet emphasis — the designer’s signature on the idea.

Outcome

A mark that captures the private moment of notation — confident, warm, and unmistakably its own.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Flap 07 — opened flat

soomoo

Brand IdentityRole — Design & production

A mark whose softness is its argument.

soomoo · Brand Identity
Flap 07 face art — soomoo · Brand Identity · #3E458C

soomoo is a drinkware brand — tea cups and tumblers — and its identity leans entirely on rounded, tactile logic, the way a cup sits in the hand. The icon is an open, slightly irregular oval with a notched interior: at once a vessel, a face, and a glyph. Paired with a lowercase wordmark in a geometric sans, the system reads warm and approachable without tipping into cute.

The doubled ‘oo’ at the centre of the name is part of the design — the letterforms echo the symbol’s circular grammar, and the lowercase keeps the brand from claiming an authority it doesn’t want. For something you hold while you slow down, restraint is the point.


The Mark

The symbol is a single closed stroke — near-circular, interrupted at the top by a gentle break that keeps it from reading as mere geometry. That gap is the detail that makes it feel alive: it implies openness, breath, a gesture held in balance. The interior counter mirrors the outer form, a figure within a figure that rewards a closer look.

Colour is a medium-depth indigo-violet, neither corporate nor casual — quiet conviction. The wordmark shares the symbol’s stroke weight and corner radius, a constraint that makes the pairing feel inevitable rather than assembled. Lowercase sets the register: a name spoken gently, not announced.

Outcome

A mark that holds its character at any scale — intimate in small reproduction, assured at display size.

↑ Fold back into the carton

Bottom flap — About

Thomas Peng

Thomas Peng is a multidisciplinary designer based in Toronto, with fifteen years of practice across brand identity, packaging, print, web, and art direction. He works in English and French, for clients that range from emerging consumer brands to established national institutions.

The work moves between extremes of scale: a logo resolved at a few points, a full packaging system, a high-volume print programme held to a national brand’s specification. What stays constant is the disposition — find the right form for the problem, then execute it to a standard that survives contact with production.

Based in
Toronto, Canada
Languages
English / Français
Practice
Brand · Packaging · Print · Web
Contact
thomas@thomaspeng.ca

Selected clients — Willo · BMW · Allstate · HearingLife

View selected work →

Bottom flap — Contact

Let’s make something worth keeping.

Brand, packaging, print, and web — from a single mark to a full system. If the brief is defined and the standard is high, I’d like to hear about it.

thomas@thomaspeng.ca
Location
Toronto, Canada
Languages
English / Français
Availability
Open to new projects