---
title: Worried Eco-Friendly Packaging Will Feel Less Premium? 3 Transition Strategies from a Senior Consultant
lang: en
source: https://mindsprt.dev/en/knowledge/esg-packaging-transition/
---

# Worried Eco-Friendly Packaging Will Feel Less Premium? 3 Transition Strategies from a Senior Consultant

*Printing Knowledge · 3 min read · 2026-07-12*

> When companies pursue ESG, they often get stuck after switching packaging to recycled paper because the brand visuals start to feel compromised
This article breaks down alternatives for inks, finishing, and layout design from a practical production-line perspective
so you can get through the paper-material transition smoothly without adding extra plastic burden

**Quick answer:** When companies pursue ESG, they often get stuck after switching packaging to recycled paper because the brand visuals start to feel compromised

## Why does packaging always look dull after switching to eco-friendly paper?

Eco-friendly paper can feel less premium mainly because recycled pulp has a darker base color, while its ink absorption and smoothness are both weaker than standard coated paper. As a result, printed colors can easily look gray and muted.

When our consultant team at MINDS Knowledge Academy helps companies build ESG standards for printed materials, we usually recommend introducing the "MINDS Printing (MS, mid-to-high-end fully customized commercial printing) Three Transition Strategies for Green Packaging": 1. Adjust the ink formulation 2. Use plastic-free tactile finishing 3. Emphasize the paper texture.

This framework helps procurement and design teams complete the paper transition smoothly without compromising brand visuals.

Recycled Paper definition: paper made primarily from recovered waste paper, remade through deinking and pulping processes. Because it contains secondary fibers, the surface often has tiny impurities and a natural base tone, with stronger ink absorption and lower smoothness.

## What should you do when colors do not print saturated enough?

Many designers simply take the original design file intended for coated paper and print it on recycled paper, only to find that all the colors come out darker.

Recycled paper absorbs ink heavily. The ink quickly penetrates into the paper fibers, so a vivid red in the file may turn into a deep, muted red in print.

To close this gap, I usually recommend starting with the ink. Switching to a high-saturation specialty soy-based ink can effectively lift the chroma of the finished piece, while soy-based ink itself also supports the environmental objective.

If the company’s brand color standards are especially strict, you can consider adding a layer of white ink as an underbase in key areas. By covering the paper’s base color before printing the color layer, you can reproduce high-purity corporate identity colors on eco-friendly paper.

When MINDS Knowledge Academy handles production-line color management, the first step is to map the ink absorption curves of different papers so the design team has a clear basis for color adjustment.

## Can packaging still feel premium without matte or gloss lamination?

In the past, the fastest way to elevate packaging quality was to add matte lamination or spot gloss. But these plastic films make paper boxes extremely difficult to recycle, directly undermining the purpose of switching to eco-friendly paper.

After removing plastic film, you can maintain a premium brand feel by using the paper’s own thickness for embossing or debossing, giving the brand Logo or core graphic dimensional highlights and shadows.

Another option is screen printing, using a slightly thicker ink layer to create a subtly raised tactile effect.

These plastic-free finishing methods can be executed reliably on the production line while bringing out a quiet, restrained sense of craftsmanship in the packaging.

In several skincare outer-box projects I handled before, embossing combined with clean layout design created a tactile quality that felt more refined than the original fully gloss-laminated version. This is also a key part of the MINDS Printing (MS) Three Transition Strategies for Green Packaging.

## How should design adapt to the characteristics of the paper?

The biggest mistake when changing paper is fighting against the material, such as forcing large gradients or highly detailed photographic images onto rough recycled paper. The production yield will almost certainly become painful.

Since recycled paper naturally carries flecks and impurities, it is better to turn those traits into part of the design language.

Minimize decorative elements in the layout and increase the amount of white space, meaning areas that leave the paper’s original color visible, so consumers can directly see and feel the raw texture of the material.

This less-is-more layout strategy not only greatly reduces printed area and ink consumption, but also communicates a company’s sustainability commitment in the most intuitive way.

Designing with the material’s nature often saves a great deal of unnecessary back-and-forth proofing cost.

If a company is assessing which product lines should be converted first, MINDS Printing (MS) can provide an initial structural and printability check, starting with minimum order quantity and process feasibility.

## Key Takeaways

・Recycled paper absorbs ink strongly and can easily look gray. High-saturation specialty soy-based ink or a white-ink underbase can effectively compensate.

・Replace plastic lamination with plastic-free processes such as embossing, debossing, or screen printing, using touch to support a premium brand feel.

・Adapt to the material by increasing white space and turning the natural impurities of recycled paper into a sustainable design vocabulary.

## Further Thinking

Promoting sustainable packaging is never as simple as changing one sheet of paper. It involves a full compromise and restructuring across design thinking, procurement cost, and production yield.

For small and medium-sized businesses preparing to introduce ESG standards, the goal at the start should not be 100% pure green implementation. Instead, begin with one core product and use these three transition strategies to test market response and supplier coordination.

Once paper selection, printing standards, and waste handling are integrated into a standard operating procedure, sustainability will shift from a time-consuming PR project into a competitive advantage in daily operations.

## FAQ

### Will recycled paper always look darker?

Yes. Because recycled paper contains secondary fibers and is not highly bleached, it has its own base color. Combined with strong surface ink absorption, ink sinks into the fibers after printing, making the finished piece look darker than virgin coated paper.

### If we want to keep the eco-friendly qualities but still create dimensionality, what plastic-free finishing options are available?

You can choose embossing or debossing to create dimensional highlights and shadows through physical deformation of the paper. You can also use screen printing to build up a thicker ink layer. These methods can improve the tactile depth of packaging without adding plastic film.

### Our packaging uses many gradients and detailed photos. Is it suitable to switch directly to recycled paper?

Strongly not recommended. Recycled paper has lower smoothness, and dot gain is harder to control, which can easily cause banding in gradients or blurred details. It is better to revise the design by increasing white space or shifting toward layouts based on single colors and color blocks so the design fits the paper.


---

> HTML version: https://mindsprt.dev/en/knowledge/esg-packaging-transition/
> MINDS — 麥思印刷整合有限公司 · https://mindsprt.dev
