Company Description
ART WTR is a premium customized packaged drinking water brand working with leading restaurants, hotels, events, and corporates. Our bottles are designed to act as brand ambassadors, delivering elegance, precision, and high recall.
We're looking for a Graphic Designer who understands that labels are not just designsthey're physical products.
Role Description
This is a full-time/Part time, Hybrid role for a Graphic Designer located in Thane.
Why this is a Grab-On opportunity:
- High ownership & visibility your designs go straight to production
- You'll shape how ART WTR looks, feels, and scales
- Work closely with founders and premium clients
- Learn the business side of branding, packaging & production
- Flexible working hours we care about output, not clock-in/clock-out
- Some days will be fast-paced rush days (client deadlines, print runs, events)
- Some days will be light or no-design days
What you will do
- Designing premium water bottle labels for restaurants, hotels, events & corporates
- Creating print-ready artworks with correct color profiles
- Experiment with BOPP, Clear-on-Clear, metallics, foils, UV & luxury finishes.
- Customising designs across different bottle sizes (200ml, 500ml, 1L, etc.)
- Move fast, iterate faster, and see your work live in the market
Must-have skills:
- Strong command of Adobe Illustrator (non-negotiable)
- Good working knowledge of Photoshop
- Comfort with vector artwork, dielines & packaging layouts
- Understanding of CMYK.
- Sharp eye for detail, alignment & premium aesthetics
- Knowledge of print finishes, lamination & label materials (+ Points)
Bonus (good to have):
- Experience in packaging / FMCG / beverage/Branding/ Business collateral design.
- Enjoy building systems, not just following briefs
Who will Thrive Here:
- Designers who love precision, luxury & real-world execution
- Those comfortable with quick turnarounds and high-quality output
- Designers who want ownership, not just instructions
- People excited creative freedom
- Designers who care how things look after printing, not just on Figma