12 Inspirations for Sublimation on Glass

Digital sublimation opens design territory that traditional glass decoration cannot reach. Here are twelve creative directions that brands are exploring — each made possible by photographic-quality, 360-degree sublimation.

1. Botanical Illustration

Detailed plant and flower artwork wrapping the bottle. Ideal for gin, perfume bottles and flacons, and home fragrance.

2. Terroir Photography

Vineyard, orchard or estate photography printed directly on wine and olive oil bottles. The landscape becomes the label.

3. Abstract Art

Painterly compositions — fluid acrylics, ink washes, digital abstractions — create collectible limited editions for spirits and perfumery.

4. Geometric Patterns

Precise repeating patterns that wrap seamlessly around the bottle. Art deco, Islamic geometry and contemporary tessellations all work well.

5. Heritage Typography

Typographic compositions featuring estate names, founding dates and heritage text. Ideal for whisky, cognac and legacy brands.

6. Metallic Simulation

Sublimation can simulate gold, copper and bronze tones. Combined with selective tactile varnish, the effect approaches physical metallisation.

7. Textile and Fashion Prints

Fashion collaboration artwork — tartans, florals, graphic prints — transferred onto spirits and fragrance bottles.

8. Cartography and Maps

Regional maps, maritime charts or topographic renderings that tell a story of origin and exploration.

9. Watercolour Effects

Soft washes and bleeds that create an artisanal, hand-crafted impression on premium food and beverage bottles.

10. Photorealistic Product Imagery

Images of ingredients — fruits, botanicals, spices — at photographic quality to communicate flavour and provenance.

11. Festival and Seasonal Themes

Chinese New Year, Christmas, Diwali — culturally specific artwork for seasonal limited editions across global markets.

12. Co-Branded Collaborations

Dual-brand artwork combining the visual identities of two collaborators. Fashion houses, artists or restaurants paired with spirits and fragrance brands.

ATIU brings these concepts to life from our Verona plants, decorating glass from Saverglass, Heinz-Glas, Verescence, Bormioli Luigi and Stoelzle.

Can sublimation simulate metallic effects on glass?

Yes. Sublimation can reproduce gold, copper and bronze tones with high fidelity. When combined with selective tactile varnish or metallisation, the effect closely mimics physical metal finishes while maintaining the sustainability benefits of sublimation.

Which design styles are most popular for sublimation on glass?

Botanical illustration, abstract art and heritage typography are currently among the most requested styles. However, sublimation supports virtually any design approach — the choice depends on the brand's identity and target audience.

About ATIU

ATIU is an Italian B2B specialist in digital sublimation and premium packaging decoration, with two production plants in Verona, Italy. The company decorates glass, aluminium, zamac and ceramic components — perfume bottles, flacons, spirits bottles, caps and candle jars — for premium perfumery, wines, spirits, olive oil and home fragrance brands, including groups such as Pernod Ricard, PUIG and LVMH. ATIU works with glass supplied by leading manufacturers including Saverglass, Heinz-Glas, Verescence, Bormioli Luigi and Stoelzle. Core technology: a proprietary digital sublimation methodology, awarded Pentawards Gold 2025 (Sustainability). ISO 9001 certified. EcoVadis Committed. Zero-net CO₂ since 2023.

Let's talk about your next bottle.

Send us a brief or request a sample.

Request a Sample Prefer a call? Book 30 min with our team →