How to write a conservative caffeine-free tea label without making wellness claims

Retail pouch benefits for an $18 saluyot tea sachet pouch — Create a photorealistic vertical 9:16 lifestyle-editorial image with a warm Kinfolk-style wellness magazine feel, showing a finished herbal saluyot tea sachet pouch cost-check scene for wellness retail and a DTC storefront, object-only, no people, no characters, no text, no numbers, no labels, no logos, no watermark. 🌿 Main subject • A premium retail-ready pouch of herbal saluyot tea sachets sits fully in frame on a warm natural wood table, with the pouch slightly open so clean inner sachets are visible, each sachet looking portioned, tidy, and protective without any printed words. The visual story should clearly suggest the $1.10 retail pouch benefit, the $0.48 inner sachet or filter head, and the $0.90 direct packing hook labor through materials only: a sturdy matte pouch, neatly tucked filter sachets, a small packing hook or hanging tab detail, a compact protective mailer, and a careful hand-packed arrangement, but without showing any currency symbols, written math, or visible numbers. 🫙 Specific materials • Include dried saluyot leaves, jute mallow leaves, translucent empty tea filter sachets, filled tea sachets, a ceramic cup with pale green herbal infusion, a small ceramic saucer, natural linen cloth, kraft mailer, soft tissue wrap, a tiny unbranded packing card turned blank-side up, a wood scoop, a few loose dried leafy fragments, a glass jar of dried saluyot leaves, and one sealed retail pouch standing upright. Keep every material recognizable and tactile: dried leaves should look leafy and green-brown, the tea should look mild and caffeine-free rather than dark medicinal, the pouch should look shelf-ready but simple, and the sachets should look clean enough for daily steeping. ✅ Composition • Arrange the objects in a diagonal flow from back-left to front-right: back-left shows a small stack of blank retail pouches and a kraft mailer, center shows the main pouch and visible sachets, front-right shows the cup, saucer, and a few loose saluyot leaves. The layout should visually imply a cost stack without text by placing six small material groups in a gentle arc: base pouch material, retail pouch layer, small prep material, tiny protective detail, inner sachet/filter, and packing hook labor. Each group should feel distinct but elegant, like a quiet retail production table after one test batch of pouches has been prepared. 💡 Margin test mood • The scene should communicate “strong enough for a small test, but not overbuilt” using restraint: no ribbons, no oversized cartons, no expensive inserts, no crowded props, no exaggerated luxury packaging. Show one pouch that feels finished, one pouch slightly creased near the side to hint at damaged-unit risk, and one blank kraft mailer nearby to suggest shipping support and real-order handling. Keep the mood practical, warm, and premium, not clinical, not pharmaceutical, not generic spa decor. 🔥 Practical details to visualize • Make the tea routine readable through objects only: one sachet beside one ceramic cup, hot water implied by faint steam, a small timer-like blank round object with no markings, and a cup size that feels like 200–250 ml. The steeping should look gentle, around 5–7 minutes, conveyed by calm steam and a pale green infusion. Include a compact group of 10 to 20 sachets partially visible inside the pouch, but do not show count marks or numbers. Suggest a first small-batch test by showing a modest cluster of finished units rather than mass-production shelves. 🪴 Retail and DTC storefront cues • The table should feel like a small wellness brand packing station, not a warehouse: natural wood surface, soft linen, ceramic cup, glass jar, kraft mailer, blank sample sachets, simple retail pouch, and a clean uncluttered background with warm depth.

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