Wenbin Li | Packaging
Wenbin Li from Beijing has a small portfolio of work, from his ‘This is Just Milk’ packaging design with subtle Chinese characters hidden within the typography, to his graffiti.
Zhu Chao | Graphic & Package design
Hubei born but Beijing based Art director Zhu Chao has had his work featured in the Tokyo the TDC Annual Awards 2012, the GDC 11 Show and the 7th Asia-Pacific Design Yearbook. You can visit his website here.
Shan San | Branding
Shan San Studio is a Hangzhou based design studio with a wide breadth of work from branding to illustration and package design. They have been comissioned by various clients including The Government of Shangcheng District, Hangzhou who commissioned ShanSan to create a visual identity for the promotion of local design graduates. Solid work, more of...
Fei Tu Fei | Illustration
Time in inject some colour back into the blog! Guangzhou based Fei Tu Fei designs childish, bright images and mixes up vector work with hand-drawn elements. I really like her packaging designs for Guava Juice, which would look great on a Chinese grocery store shelf (Jinkelong?) Fei Tu Fei doesn’t break any new ground but its fun...
Packaging & Branding | No.1 Shili Furnishings | Liu Yong Qing
Liu Yong Qing design based in Shenzhen is one of the more well known Chinese design companies. Shenzhen is the fabled land for designers apparently, with a lot of studios concentrated there, more so than Beijing or Shanghai. The benefit of Shenzhen is that it is not an international city yet, but forms part of...
Packaging | Bright Yoghurt | Rosanne Wong
Work from designer Rosanne Wong, born in the States but currently working at a Studio in Shanghai.
Architecture / Contact / Furniture / Graphic / Identity / Other / Packaging / Photography / Urbanology
Why write a blog on Chinese Design?
Simply put, there are very few good quality English language blogs out there. Yes, there are Chinese design blogs, but they have alternative agendas, like promoting their company or work, or they are sporadically updated and have little decent/original content. ‘Made in China’ will soon mean created in China. This blog hopes to chronicle that. You may see...

