Australian Wine Labels
Penfolds Wines Pty Ltd Penfolds Grange Hermitage Bin 95 1967
colour print on paper; 11.3 x 9.2cm
South Australiana Collections, State Library of South Australia
Today’s labels are, by comparison, effusive—works of art in their own right.
Under current Australian wine law, a label must contain the wine’s volume, grape variety or style of the wine, alcohol content, number of standard drinks, allergens, name and address of producer, and country of origin. Everything else is optional.
For many aficionados, the golden age of wine-label design occurred in Adelaide during the 1950s, when a range of labels designed by Wytt Morro (b.1922) became the benchmark.
Morro’s front label design for Stonyfell’s Metala, an all-text affair like the more famous Penfold’s Grange label, was possibly the first in Australia to include a number for each individual bottle. Morro is best known for the famous Orlando Barossa Pearl label—released in 1956.
South Australia today produces half of all Australian wines, due in no small part, to the enormous expertise provided by migrants.
Unknown designer Henschke ‘Hill of Grace’ Keyneton Shiraz 1969
colour print on paper; 11.5 x 8.9cmSouth Australiana Collections, State Library of South Australia
Unknown designer Leo Buring Leibfrauweincolour print on paper; 9.8 x 11.8cmSouth Australiana Collections, State Library of South Australia
Australian wine labels
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