opinion

Celebrating the LGBTQ+ Community With Inclusive Packaging Design

Celebrating the LGBTQ+ Community With Inclusive Packaging Design

Pride Month is a time of visibility, joy and self-expression. In the pleasure industry, projecting that energy can start with something as simple as a box. Market research shows that 72% of U.S. consumers say product packaging influences their purchasing decisions. Inclusive, intentional design can make a lasting impression, shaping how customers connect with a brand from the start.

In a space centered on intimacy, confidence and personal discovery, packaging also has the power to celebrate the diversity of the queer community. From inclusive language to vibrant visuals, every design choice is an opportunity to say: “You are seen. You are valued. This space is for you.”

When your packaging reflects real intention, it doesn’t just stand out, it reinforces your brand, builds loyalty, and shows customers what you truly stand for.

Design the Experience, Not Just the Package

Thoughtful packaging design can instantly convey whom your brand is for and make customers feel welcome. Start with structure. Avoid strictly gendered shapes, symbols or descriptors. Instead, consider versatile, discreet designs like matte black tubes, soft gradient boxes or minimalist pouches that allow customers of all identities to feel ownership over the experience.

Instead of relying on pink or blue coding, lean into soft curves, clean typography and mood-forward color palettes like deep plum, soft jade or bold neutrals.

Want to go further? Include optional sticker packs, blank “for/from” notes or unbranded packaging options, to allow shoppers to personalize their experience. These small touches transform unboxing into a moment of self-expression, and in a retail setting, they can be the detail that encourages a customer to pick up your product.

Use Storytelling That Affirms, Not Assumes

The language on your packaging is your brand’s voice, and that voice should feel welcoming. Consider swapping gendered terminology with usage-based phrasing like “designed for external stimulation” or “ideal for G-spot or prostate play.” Wherever possible, reference anatomy and sensation, not identity.

Offering gender-neutral alternatives helps more customers feel seen. Terms like “designed for vulva owners” or “made for penis owners” can be helpful when describing function and fit. These phrases center the experience without making assumptions about how someone identifies.

Add small guides or QR codes that link to video tutorials, pleasure maps or FAQs designed to support a wide range of bodies and experiences. Use a mix of affirming and instructional storytelling on inner flaps or product inserts. Use tactile printing like embossing or spot UV to elevate key terms like “Explore,” “Celebrate” or “Pleasure Your Way.” The goal is to educate with intention, using language that invites everyone in with clarity, confidence and care.

Let Your Imagery Speak to Inclusion

Visual storytelling is often the fastest way to determine a brand’s intentions. Go beyond stock photography and consider illustrations, silhouettes or abstract motifs that celebrate queer aesthetics without relying on rainbow iconography.

If you use photos, make them count. Include body-diverse models, queer couples, and trans or nonbinary representation across your print and digital assets. Representation shouldn’t just be symbolic; it should reflect the real people you serve. When customers see themselves reflected authentically, it builds trust, deepens connection and signals that your commitment to inclusion goes beyond the surface.

On retail shelves, inclusive imagery often does more than stand out; it makes customers feel seen before they even touch the product.

Make Packaging Authentic, Not Performative

Pride-themed packaging can be a powerful gesture, but only when it reflects a deeper commitment. Customers are attuned to whether brands are showing up with real support or simply capitalizing on the moment. Rainbow overlays and one-liner affirmations fall short if they’re not backed by action, intention and inclusivity that extends beyond June.

If you’re updating packaging for Pride, ask: What does this communicate about our brand year-round? Does it reflect who we are, whom we hire and whom we support? Are we telling real stories or just decorating the surface?

Here are a few ways to bring substance into your packaging:

  • Use the space to share your values or spotlight community initiatives.
  • Feature voices from LGBTQ+ team members or collaborators.
  • Provide accessible links to resources, education or nonprofits you support.

Prideful packaging doesn’t have to be loud and colorful to be meaningful. Leading with integrity resonates more than rainbows.

Collaborate With LGBTQ+ Designers From Start to Shelf

Partnering with LGBTQ+ creatives brings fresh insight, lived experience and meaningful representation to your packaging. From structural designers to illustrators and copywriters, these collaborators help ensure your design choices resonate beyond surface-level gestures.

Not sure where to start? Here are some hints:

  • Tap queer design collectives through inclusive creative directories or community networks.
  • Co-create a limited-edition Pride box with an LGBTQ+ artist and share their story on the outer sleeve.
  • Run a packaging redesign contest during Pride and highlight submissions on your social media or in store displays.

True inclusion starts behind the scenes. By inviting the right voices into the process early, you create packaging that’s not only beautiful, but also aligned with the audience it’s meant to serve.

Extend Inclusion Beyond the Box

Unboxing might happen at home, but inclusion starts on the shelf. Your packaging sets the tone, but the whole retail experience should reinforce it.

Ensure store staff are prepared to create an open, approachable and affirming environment for everyone. Their presence and product knowledge help bridge the gap between what’s on the box and how customers feel while shopping.

Merchandise with intention. Group products not just by gender or identity, but by sensation, function or experience level to better reflect how customers explore pleasure.

Track, Listen and Improve

The best packaging decisions come from listening. Host small focus groups or talk directly with your community to learn how your packaging is landing, what feels affirming, what feels off and what could be better.

Encourage sales reps and retail teams to relay feedback from the field. These frontline insights are often the first sign of what’s resonating, or what needs to evolve.

Make it easy for customers to share their thoughts. Add a QR code to the box or include a prompt in post-purchase emails asking how the packaging made them feel. Encourage unboxing videos and tagged content on social to see what elements your audience is engaging with most.

When you treat packaging as a two-way conversation, your community becomes part of the design process — and your brand becomes stronger because of it.

Make Pride a Year-Round Practice

In a crowded retail environment, brands that lead with purpose, not just promotions, build the most profound loyalty. Inclusive packaging is a strategic advantage, but it is also a celebration of community, creativity and care.

This June, let your packaging reflect the joy, expression and love at the heart of Pride. But don’t stop there. Keep designing for inclusion all year long. When your packaging reflects real intention, it doesn’t just stand out, it reinforces your brand, builds loyalty, and shows customers what you truly stand for.

Matthew Spindler is the associate marketing manager for Blush.

Related:  

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

profile

WIA Profile: Cynthia Wielgosz Elliott

The past year has been a challenging one for the team at premier lubricant manufacturer Sliquid. Late in 2024, company co-founder Dean Elliott passed away after battling cancer, though he managed to flash his wide, signature grin until the very end.

Women in Adult ·
opinion

Michigan's Intimate Ideas Offers Playful Retail Setting for Wide Range of Shoppers

Jerry Manis, the regional manager of Intimate Ideas’ Michigan stores, never planned on working in adult retail — but he says it’s turned out to be a surprisingly rewarding gig.

Quinton Bellamie ·
opinion

Kraig McGee Blends Family Biz Experience, Creative Background at TAF Distributing

Walk into any Adam & Eve store in the Mountain West region of the U.S. and you’ve likely stumbled into a TAF Distributing outfit. Owned by industry veteran Kraig McGee Jr. and staffed by his closest family members, McGee’s 35 TAF-operated stores span 13 states, from woodsy Idaho to scenic Utah and well beyond.

Colleen Godwin ·
opinion

How Pleasure Brands Can Ethically Market to LGBTQ+ Communities

Every June, the rainbow floodgates open. Suddenly, pleasure products are “Pride-themed,” companies change their logos and brands rush to show just how inclusive they are — at least for 30 days. But as a queer, nonbinary marketing strategist who works with adult brands year-round, I’m here to say: Rainbow dildos alone are not progress. They’re often just noise.

Hail Groo ·
opinion

A Retailer's Road Map for First-Timers' Anal August

Anal August offers a prime opportunity for brands and stores to capture new customers and drive growth in a category that’s gaining mainstream momentum. As consumer interest in anal play continues to rise, now is the time to meet first-time buyers where they are, with approachable products, trusted education and a clear path to pleasure.

Matthew Spindler ·
opinion

Optimizing Your Leadership Through Wellness Practices

For many of us, 2025 has proved intensely stressful — and we’re still only halfway through the year. In times like these, it may seem counterintuitive or even irresponsible to talk about seeking pleasure. Yet pleasure, presence, joy and connection can help you return to a mental and physical state that allows you to face and handle stressors.

Sarah Tomchesson ·
opinion

Chastity Play Is Trending: Why It Should Be in Your Marketing Strategy

From chastity fetishes to power play, erotic control — once considered an esoteric niche within the world of BDSM — is now entering the mainstream. Google searches for “chastity cages,” “chastity fetish” and “orgasm denial” have exploded over the past year, with interest especially high for beginner-friendly models.

Naima Karp ·
opinion

A Look at Adult Retail's Role in Community Care

In the adult retail industry, we focus on empowerment, exploration and connection. We connect people with products that can transform their relationships with their bodies, with their partners and with themselves.

Rin Musick ·
trends

A Deep Dive Into Key Trends Shaping Pleasure Products

In 2025, the pleasure industry is evolving in intentional ways. Rather than racing toward newness for novelty’s sake, brands are reassessing everything from shape and function to what price intended shoppers can afford.

Ariana Rodriguez ·
profile

WIA Profile: Jia Jeng

Modern branding is all about storytelling — and Jia Jeng certainly knows how to tell an authentic, perspective-shifting tale. As brand manager for ID Lubricants, Jeng applies her creative talent to shaping the long-established company’s public image in a way that aligns with her own vision for an ethical future.

Women in Adult ·
Show More