
How Illustrations and Mascots Shape Food Brands That Stick
When you think of food branding, what comes to mind first, the taste of the product or the face that represents it? More often than not, it’s the face. McDonald’s has Ronald. Amul has a little polka-dot dress, girl. Pringles has its mustached man. Mascots and illustrations are not just decoration; they are brand anchors that live rent-free in consumers’ minds.
Why Illustrations and Mascots Work in Food Branding
Humanizing the Brand: A mascot gives your brand a voice and personality. The Amul girl doesn’t just sell butter; she comments on politics, cricket, and culture, keeping the brand relevant for decades.
Visual Memory > Text: Studies show that people retain 65% of visual information compared to just 10% of text. That’s why mascots like Colonel Sanders remain recognizable across generations, even in markets where KFC wasn’t originally dominant.
Consistency Across Platforms: Illustrations can be adapted for use across various platforms, including packaging, digital ads, merchandise, and even store design. A strong mascot becomes a visual shorthand for the brand.
Global and Indian Case Studies
- KFC’s Colonel Sanders: Turned the founder into a timeless brand ambassador, still used across ads and packaging worldwide.
- Parle-G Girl: Illustrated for brand recall and clarity, she remains one of the most recognizable faces in Indian FMCG history.
- Boomer Man: This superhero bubble-gum mascot, reminiscent of 1990s childhoods, turned a product into an adventure
- Amul Girl: A 55-year-old mascot that has become India’s cultural commentator while keeping butter relevant.
- Pringles Mascot: Simple, clean, and instantly recognizable on cluttered shelves.
- MDH Dadaji: Directly connecting the product to the founder, this mascot blurred the line between brand and real personality, cementing MDH’s trust factor in the masala market.
Why Food Brands Can’t Ignore It
With thousands of new restaurants, QSRs, and packaged food startups entering the market every year, competition is fierce. Taste may win hearts, but illustrations and mascots win recall. At Logical Showsha, we design mascots that aren’t generic clipart but characters rooted in strategy, built to connect, entertain, and convert.
Food is forgettable without a story. Mascots and illustrations are the story. They build consistency, recall, and loyalty, turning a product into a brand that truly sticks.