- Poster 360
- Clothing 196
- Device 279
- Advertising 291
- Branding 218
- Packaging 221
- T Shirt 134
- Business Card 155
- Outdoor 202
- Sticker 121
- Billboard 144
- Book 79
- Stationery 124
- Box 114
- Sign 127
- Magazine 54
- Storefront 92
- Paper 85
- Cosmetic 88
- Shopping Bag 101
- Can 52
- Flyer 30
- Tote Bag 36
- Display 55
- Frame 40
- Letterhead 41
- Bottle 45
- Wall 54
- Badge 38
- Vinyl 29
- Sans Serif 335
- Calligraphy 47
- Handwriting 286
- Display 490
- Bold 292
- Script 149
- Serif 231
- Retro 128
- Graffiti 60
- Y2K 48
- Elegant 168
- Western 69
- Gothic 61
- Futuristic 85
- Bubble 60
- Playful 138
- Art Deco 51
- Wedding 95
- Sports 55
- Brush 128
- Pixel 84
- Groovy 60
- Signature 86
- Cartoon 90
- Medieval 58
- Typewriter 51
- Blackletter 75
- Marker 75
- Grunge 48
- Monoline 46
Pouch Mockups
Inside our pouch mockup section, you’ll find the flexible formats many products actually use on shelf: doypacks, kraft pouches, sachets, and ziplock bags. They’ll make it easier to see whether your branding reads clearly across curves, creases, and reflective materials.
Pouch mockups for coffee, snacks, and cosmetics
Flexible packaging flexes light and type in ways a flat file cannot predict, and a doypack's folds will bend a logo you thought was safe. Consider checking that on stand-up pouches, sachets, and coffee bags — all delivered as high-res mockups.
The Smart Objects carry pre-mapped distortion grids that wrap your design around the side seams and base gusset, so a full-bleed layout follows the structure. Backgrounds are isolated for an easy color or texture swap. Because these are photographic PSD files, they behave best in Photoshop, where the Smart Object and texture blending stay intact.
Types of pouch mockups
- Stand-up doypacks: the retail staple with an expandable base gusset and crisp side seals, where the fold bends a full-bleed layout.
- Kraft paper pouches: matte brown and white finishes for eco-friendly goods and artisanal snacks.
- Metallic and foil sachets: reflective aluminum for single-dose cosmetics, powders, and technical components.
- Ziplock flat bags: slider-top and press-close forms for streetwear pieces, accessories, and confections.
- Spouted pouches: capped liquid pouches for drinks, sauces, and baby food, where the spout interrupts the label.
Where pouch mockups earn their keep
Flexible packaging bends light, type, shadows, and proportions all at once, which is why a logo that looked safe on a flat dieline might feel warped on a pouch. The mockup helps catch that before production, showing how the design behaves on a stand-up bag, sachet, or refill pack while there is still time to adjust spacing, scale, hierarchy, and seam placement.
Packaging designers use these scenes to see a coffee, snack, supplement, or cosmetic identity wrapped around a real object. Founders use them to build store listings, pitch decks, and launch pages. The gusset is often where the biggest surprises appear: a pattern may break awkwardly, a color block may lose balance, or important type may drift into a fold.
Pouch mockups favor food, drink, beauty, and refill packaging:
- Coffee and tea — bean pouches, loose-leaf bags, drip sachets, tasting packs, refill formats. Origin stories, roast notes, and premium cues should feel organized and legible on a soft, flexible package.
- Snacks and pantry goods — granola, dried fruit, chips, pet treats, powdered ingredients.
- Beauty and personal care — refill pouches, masks, sample sachets, treatment packs, travel-size products..
- Supplements and sport nutrition — protein powders, wellness blends, single doses, hydration mixes, gym-focused products. Dense information and strong claims often need to fit into a limited front area.
- Household and utility refills — detergent refills, garden mixes, cleaning products, bulk refill systems, practical consumables.
Double-click the Smart Object, paste your flat layout, and save. It conforms to the curves and wrinkles on its own.
Yes. The backgrounds are isolated, so you can drop in any color or texture without touching the pouch.
No. The Smart Objects use pre-mapped distortion grids that wrap your art around the side seams and base, so a full-bleed layout follows the structure.
They are layered PSD templates for Photoshop, which keeps the Smart Object and texture blending accurate.