Skip to content

Matcha Box Design Contest Result


Thank you very much for participating in the Matcha Box Design Contest.

It was very exciting to see so many people participating and commenting on the contests. We really appreciate all the input.

Here is the result from the contests, with selected comments from you. We also have a link to the actual product produced with your selected design.

What The Contest Was

Since it has been a while, let me remind you what the actual contest was.

The contest was a simple 2-question survey to select the best-looking box design.

Here are the questions that you are being asked: (The actual form can be accessed here, and even though the contest is closed, you can still submit your selection if you wish.)

Matcha Question

Matcha Question 2

Why We Needed Box Design

Now let me share with you the reason why we needed the design in the first place when our matcha tin can has been very popular and has been in production for a very long time.

The reason: We are getting into Amazon. 

Yes, we have decided that, with Amazon being the preferred shipping carrier for many of our customers, we wanted to try out and see if our products could be shipped via Amazon Prime. (It is called FBA, or Fulfillment By Amazon.)

We are still learning many things about how Amazon works, but one of the requirements Amazon put in place was a barcode. Our product has to have an Amazon-specific Barcode somewhere on a flat surface.

Our Matcha Tin Can was too small to place the barcode; therefore, we decided to create a new box that could have a barcode on the bottom of the box.

Here is the actual picture of the barcode on the bottom of the design of the box you picked!

Matcha Box Barcode for Amazon

Since we always involve you in the selection and creation of our new products and designs, we hosted a large contest to see what you liked.

Comments from You

We really appreciate all your comments, and we read every one of them.

The resulting box (you can see it at the end of this blog post) is taking in many of your comments on the winning design.

Here are some of the comments we received from you: The selections A–E match the above selection of the box design.

(Sorry, we cannot feature all your comments, so we selected only a few... is your comment there?)

Comments from people who picked Design D

  • This is a lovely design if you want to increase the intensity of flavor. In case you want a more mellow flavor, I would go with design E.
  • This one looks cool and more sophisticated. Just like the taste of matcha.
  • I like many of them equally, but I personally don't really like A and C because they look too wordy with a white background.
  • I chose D but would love to see the color adjusted a little more to have a more matcha hue. Let me know if you need help with that. Shaleah P.
  • The darker shades of the watercolor design pop out, and it caught and drew my eye more than the others. It also reflects the opacity and bold hue of the tea.
  • Option D feels the most unique, playful, and interesting.
  • Being a designer, I'm glad to see you're using the same typography on your packages. Surveying customers like this will empower a few, but it will make others feel like their designs were "lost" and their opinion was not heard.
  • Eye-catching design among them. Some of them are too simple, almost medicine package-like, and some remind me of tissue paper boxes. I strongly recommend my pick. I'm a design consultant (graphics and architectural).
  • I would choose E if it had more green tea leaves or plants on it.
  • The design I selected really stands out from the others. It is beautiful, aesthetically pleasing, and not cluttered. It draws the eye to the item, whereas the others are too wordy.
  • I like that the packaging has some matcha color on it, but it should be different from other competitors ones. Modern, simple, and healthy-looking is good. I like the "E" and "G" as well. It's hard to choose only one!
  • Hi Kei, I like the one with the splash of green. It was the one my eye first went to. Having the splash wrap around the corner makes it stand out even more. I hope you are well!
  • I really like option D, as I think it looks the most modern. I’m picturing it in someone’s cupboard next to all of their other packaged food items, and how the design would look compared to most other product designs nowadays. -Lexi

    Comments from people who picked Design E
    • This one looks the most inviting; if I were in the tea aisle, this one would stand out the most and make me want to buy Matcha Tea.
    • The others are more like cosmetic boxes. Maybe you still need to get in touch.
    • It caught my eye because it was bright. But the one next to it looked good too.
    • I like the airiness of the tea leaves. The other designs are too busy and look like any other product.
    • The leaves remind me more of Matcha.
    • This one looks fresh and vibrant, like matcha.
    • All of the boxes are very beautiful; however, I find the layout of them reminds me more of a skin care package than a consumable. Beautiful designs!!
    • D would be my second favorite. They both have cleaner lines and colors.
    • Hi Kei. I'm glad to be of service. One suggestion for whatever you choose: Make the font a little larger and darker. A pretty box is a lovely thing, but if you can't read the print, well, that is just frustration.
    • We enjoy your products and communications.
    • Caught my eye immediately.
    • I wish there wasn't a need for all the writing at the front of the package (the bullet points). It affects the image of your product, making it look cheap.But I guess it is a market-specific thing that actually helps you get more sales.
    • Like this box, It is peaceful and Zen-like. 🙂
    • Darken the color of the leaves just a tad.
    • From a quick look, this box most likely represents a box of Japanese tea.

     And The Result

    And here is the result: As you can see from the comment above, Design D and E were the most popular, and we were getting many comments about these two designs. 

    Was your design the winner?

    FYI, my selection was A, so mine wasn't the winner.😞 

    Matcha Box Design

    You Can Get Yours With A Discount

    The reason we waited so long for the result to be announced was that we wanted the product to be ready for you when we announced it. Sorry, it took a long time as we had to produce the box and figure out all the Amazon logistics for shipping, etc. It took a while, but it is here.

    Please click on the image below or the link below to be the first one to try out our matcha in the new box you designed.


    See the Resulting Product On Amazon

    Japanese Green Tea Company Amazon Matcha

     

    View and Get Your Matcha On Amazon Now!

    FAQs about Customer-Driven Tea Package Design

    Why is press and industry recognition important for Japanese tea brands?

    Customer design contests for matcha box packaging engage tea drinkers in the brand experience at a deeper level than pure consumption. Winning designs sometimes get used on actual products, creating a direct customer connection to the package customers see. Press features signal industry recognition and broader cultural relevance beyond the brand's core customers, helping build credibility with audiences who don't yet know the brand directly.

    That said, press coverage isn't the same as quality. Some heavily-covered brands produce mediocre tea; some excellent specialty tea brands have minimal press presence because they prioritize product over PR. Press coverage is one signal among many.

    For customers, press features can be a useful discovery mechanism — articles featuring tea brands often introduce readers to specialty brands they wouldn't find otherwise. The discovery value works in both directions.

    How can I tell if a Japanese tea brand has genuine quality vs. just marketing presence?

    Three signals. First, supply-chain transparency — does the brand disclose specific farm origins, cultivars, harvest dates? Second, product breadth — does the brand offer multiple tea types with depth in each, or just a few products with marketing-heavy descriptions? Third, customer review consistency — do customer reviews on third-party platforms (not just the brand's own site) consistently report quality?

    Brands with marketing-heavy presence but thin product information are usually less reliable than brands with detailed product information and modest marketing. The information-density of the product description signals what the brand actually focuses on.

    Another reliable check: how does the brand handle customer service questions about specific products? Brands that can answer detailed questions about cultivar, origin, harvest, and brewing parameters know what they're selling. Brands that respond with generic marketing language don't.

    What's the difference between retail availability and brand quality?

    Mass retail availability (Amazon, supermarkets) doesn't mean quality. Many specialty Japanese tea brands appear on Amazon but the products are often the entry-level versions of the brand's lineup. The premium products often stay on the brand's own website. The Sencha Lover Gift Set exemplifies this — direct-from-brand purchase typically gets the best prices on the highest-quality products.

    Conversely, hard-to-find boutique-only brands aren't automatically better. Some excellent Japanese tea is widely available; some less-good tea is artificially scarce. Availability isn't a quality signal in either direction.

    Practical: judge tea brands on actual product quality rather than retail-channel signals. Direct purchase from brand websites usually offers the best prices and selection; Amazon and supermarket distribution offer convenience but often limited selection.

    Are awards from tea competitions reliable indicators of quality?

    Awards from credible tea-industry organizations (Global Tea Championship, World Tea Awards, regional Japanese tea competitions) reflect actual quality assessment by trained tasters — meaningful signal of tea quality. Multiple awards over multiple years strengthen the signal further.

    Less reliable: generic "award-winning" claims without specifying which awards. Some brands win minor awards and lean on the marketing value; some skip competitions entirely while producing excellent tea.

    Practical: use awards as one input among several. A multi-year award winner is probably worth trying; a single award from an obscure competition isn't decisive. Combine with direct customer reviews, sample purchases, and your own taste preferences.

    How do tea brands like JPCo balance traditional craft with modern customer expectations?

    Traditional craft on the product side, modern operations on the customer side. The tea sourcing relationships, farm-direct supply chains, and cultivar selections follow traditional Japanese tea-industry patterns — multi-generational relationships, careful seasonal harvest timing, established cooperatives. The customer-facing operation (e-commerce, fast shipping, customer service, content marketing) follows modern direct-to-consumer brand standards.

    This split is genuinely difficult. Brands that emphasize traditional craft sometimes have weak customer experience; brands with great customer experience sometimes source generic tea. Maintaining both requires ongoing investment in both sides.

    For customers, the brands worth supporting are those that get both right — quality product from real Japanese farms plus responsive customer service and fast shipping. The combination is what makes specialty tea genuinely accessible to international audiences who can't fly to Japan to buy directly.

    TRY OUR PREMIUM MATCHA

    80 reviews

    Matcha - Ceremonial Japanese Powdered Green Tea

    $39.00
    Quick view

    This ceremonial matcha is crafted from the finest Japanese green tea, grown in nutrient-rich soil enhanced with compostable grasses and sugarcane through the Chagusaba method, which gives the tea a natural sweetness and exceptional flavor. In collaboration with researchers from Shizuoka University, farmers ensure that the soil quality consistently produces tea of the highest standard.

    Renowned among top Japanese chefs for its unmatched aroma, this matcha is made by carefully shading the plants before harvest to boost caffeine and amino acids, then meticulously drying, de-stemming, and grinding the leaves into a fine powder. Made from the Yabukita cultivar, this 1.8 oz (50g) matcha comes in a high-quality, air-tight paper tube canister, providing a luxurious and authentic Japanese tea experience.

    2 reviews

    Matcha and Chasen Whisk Gift Set

    $74.00 $66.00
    Quick view

    This set features a premium matcha made from the finest Japanese green tea, cultivated in soil enriched with compostable grasses and sugarcane to bring out a natural sweetness. In collaboration with researchers from Shizuoka University, farmers carefully study soil conditions to enhance flavor quality. The tea plants are shaded before harvest to increase caffeine and amino acid content, then skillfully dried, de-stemmed, and ground into a fine powder, creating a matcha with a luxurious aroma and taste highly regarded by top Japanese chefs.

    Paired with the matcha is a traditional 100-prong bamboo chasen whisk, considered the highest-grade among matcha tools. Unlike common 40-60 prong versions, this finely crafted whisk is widely used in high-end tea ceremonies in Japan. Its balanced dimensions offer the perfect design for preparing a smooth and frothy bowl of authentic matcha.

    Ceremonial Japanese Powdered Green Tea and Electric Matcha Whisk

    $56.99 $45.60
    Quick view

    This starter gift set brings together premium ceremonial Japanese matcha and the Elementi electric matcha whisk, giving you everything you need to prepare smooth, authentic matcha at home. The matcha is 100% made in Japan, produced from carefully shaded green tea leaves that are stone-ground into a vibrant, fine powder prized for its rich umami, natural caffeine, and amino acid content.

    Paired with the matcha is the Elementi electric whisk, designed for quick and effortless preparation. Its powerful motor creates a smooth, frothy cup in seconds, while the ergonomic, soft-touch grip ensures comfortable handling. This item ships within the USA only (excluding HI and AK).

    22 reviews

    Matcha - Japanese Limited Reserve Ceremonial Green Tea - (Global Tea Champion 2018, 2025)

    $300.00
    Quick view

    This Premium Ceremonial Grade Matcha is one of the most luxurious matcha teas available, crafted from carefully cultivated Japanese green tea grown in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil using the Chagusaba method. Traditionally reserved for high-end tea ceremonies in Japan and loved by many tea masters, this matcha was once unavailable outside of Japan and is now finally accessible to U.S. consumers. Every step of its production, from shading the tea plants to increase caffeine and amino acid levels to the meticulous removal of stems and veins before grinding into a fine powder, is handled with a blend of advanced technology and time-honored tradition. Made from the Yabukita cultivar, this 30g (1.05 oz) ceremonial matcha offers a vivid color, unforgettable aroma, and the highest standard of flavor, earning recognition as a Global Tea Champion in 2018 and 2025.

    4 reviews

    The Covered Trio Gift Set - Ceremonial Matcha, Gyokuro, and Nozomi Japanese Green Tea Set Package

    $143.00 $128.00
    Quick view

    This tea set features three premium Japanese green teas, all cultivated in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil to enhance their flavor and natural sweetness. Gyokuro, a prized shaded green tea, is grown under special mats for 20 days to increase caffeine and amino acid levels, resulting in a rich, sweet taste and deep mossy green color. The set also includes a luxurious matcha, crafted from carefully shaded, hand-processed leaves and renowned for its smooth, aromatic flavor, developed in collaboration with researchers from Shizuoka University to maximize the benefits of the enriched soil. Completing the collection is Nozomi, a fine Kabuse-cha or "Covered Green Tea," where young tea leaves are gently shaded just before sprouting, producing a soft, refined flavor perfect for tea enthusiasts.


    Related Articles You May Be Interested

    How to Make Matcha À La Mode (Matcha Ice Cream)
    How to Make Matcha À La Mode (Matcha Ice Cream)
    Matcha
    Chocolate
    Cheesecake
    Bars - Recipe
    Matcha Chocolate Cheesecake Bars (Video Recipe) - Match(a) Made in Heaven! Show Your Love with Matcha this Valentine
    Meet Eijiro Tsukada (塚田英次郎): The Charismatic Businessman Behind Cuzen Matcha — Now Available at Japanese Green Tea Co.
    Meet Eijiro Tsukada (塚田英次郎): The Charismatic Businessman Behind Cuzen Matcha — Now Available at Japanese Green Tea Co.
    Make Your Breakfast Special with Morning Matcha
    Make Your Breakfast Special with Morning Matcha
    From Plant To Your Tea Cup How Is Matcha Tea Made?
    From Plant To Your Tea Cup How Is Matcha Tea Made?

    Get Free Bonus Books

    Join Green Tea Club

    Sign up for free to the Green Tea Club to get advice and exclusive articles about how to choose Japanese Tea, and tips, tricks, and recipes for enjoying Japanese tea.

    Unsubscribe anytime. It’s free!

    About the author

    Kei Nishida

    Kei Nishida

    Author, CEO Dream of Japan

    info@japanesegreenteain.com

    Certification: PMP, BS in Computer Science

    Education: Western Washington University

    Kei Nishida is a passionate Japanese green tea connoisseur, writer, and the founder and CEO of Japanese Green Tea Co., a Dream of Japan Company.

    Driven by a deep desire to share the rich flavors of his homeland, he established the only company that sources premium tea grown in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil—earning multiple Global Tea Champion awards.

    Expanding his mission of introducing Japan’s finest to the world, Kei pioneered the launch of the first-ever Sumiyaki charcoal-roasted coffee through Japanese Coffee Co. He also brought the artistry of traditional Japanese craftsmanship to the global market by making katana-style handmade knives—crafted by a renowned katana maker—available outside Japan for the first time through Japanese Knife Co.

    Kei’s journey continues as he uncovers and shares Japan’s hidden treasures with the world.

    Learn more about Kei Nishida

    Related Posts

    OC Japan Fair April 2026 — Visit Us at Booth #A8!
    OC Japan Fair Spring 2026 Recap (April 3 - 5 2026)

    We were at OC Japan Fair again! April 3-5 2026 with new products, Miki Pon's art debut and more. Here is a recap video f

    Read More
    Super Mario and Japanese Green Tea
    Super Mario and Japanese Green Tea

    Super Mario and green tea share a hometown! Watch our Yoshi Matcha Cookies video recipe + discover how Nintendo and matc

    Read More
    Our Matcha Is Now at Pillow Talk Cafe in Pasadena — Master Japanese-Inspired Cake Makers
    Our Matcha Is Now at Pillow Talk Cafe in Pasadena — Master Japanese-Inspired Cake Makers

    Our matcha is now at Pillow Talk Cafe Pasadena! Meet the cafe, try the Egg Heaven sando & Matchamisu, and see how th

    Read More
    Leave a comment

    Your email address will not be published..

    Cart

    Your cart is currently empty.

    Start Shopping

    Select options