Deep-green studio menu with packaging case study

Deep-green studio menu with packaging case study, minimal, corporate-clean, dark

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A studio navigation overlay split between a deep-green case-study panel showing a green glass jar and a white menu set in mixed serif-and-sans type.

Industryagency, portfolio
Palette
#FFFFFF
#020D05
#0B5524
#066E2C
#031C0C

Summary

A design-studio navigation overlay floating on a dark green ambient background, split vertically into a deep-green featured-case-study panel and a white menu panel. The case study showcases a frosted green glass jar with a turned wooden lid, branded BYBETH, Branding + Packaging.

Visual description

The overlay is a single card centered on a near-black green gradient backdrop. Its left half is solid forest green: a small FEATURED CASE STUDY label sits top-left, a product photo of a green glass jar on a plinth lit dramatically against green sits center, and a serif-italic plus bold-sans pull quote (Beauty, consciously considered) anchors the bottom next to the BYBETH credit. The right half is clean white with a stacked nav: Work, Studio (in italic serif), Expertise, then Latest News and Contact us in a lighter weight, with a close X top-right. A thin footer row carries studio address, phone, email, and an Instagram link in fine grey type. Type mixes a high-contrast serif with a neutral sans.

Key takeaway

The serif-italic word dropped into an otherwise sans nav list (Studio) to add editorial personality to a plain menu. A tonal monochrome product shot, green jar on green, lit so only the form and the wooden lid pop, which feels far more premium than a cut-out on white. Splitting a menu overlay into a content half and a navigation half so the nav doubles as a portfolio teaser.

Reuse notes

Strong reference for a beauty, wellness, or luxury packaging studio site, especially a full-screen menu or case-study drawer. The single-hue color story (everything in greens, only the lid breaking it) is the load-bearing idea and is easy to retheme to any brand color. Caveat: the tonal product photo needs careful lighting to read; a flatly lit shot would kill the effect.

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