Merchandising by Color: Creating Displays That Stop Customers in Their Tracks
When it comes to retail displays, color is one of the most powerful tools you have. Before a customer reads a sign, notices a price, or picks up a product, they're responding to color. A thoughtfully merchandised display can draw shoppers across the store, create visual excitement, and encourage multiple purchases.
One of our favorite ways to build a display is by starting with color.
Our candy collection makes this especially easy because each product naturally brings a vibrant pop of color to the shelf:
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Cherry Sours – Red
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Orange Sours – Orange
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Lemon Sours – Yellow
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Watermelon Sours – Green
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Cotton Candy Jelly Beans – Pink
Together, these products create an eye-catching rainbow effect that immediately grabs attention. Instead of scattering colors throughout the store, consider grouping them together to create a cohesive visual story.
Start With a Clean Foundation
The best colorful displays begin with a simple backdrop. White floating shelves, light wood fixtures, neutral risers, and clean signage allow product colors to become the focal point.
A bright, uncluttered display helps each color stand out while creating a boutique feel that shoppers love.
Use Color to Create Seasons
Color merchandising works especially well throughout the year.
Spring might feature pinks, yellows, and fresh greens.
Summer can focus on bright citrus colors and vibrant reds.
Fall displays often incorporate warm oranges, golds, and deep reds.
Holiday merchandising can bring together traditional reds and greens while adding metallic accents for a festive feel.
Instead of completely rebuilding displays each season, simply rotate products and accessories that support your chosen color palette.
Create Height and Movement
A display becomes even more engaging when colors are layered at different heights.
Use:
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Cake stands
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Wooden risers
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Small crates
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Display boxes
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Decorative books
Varying heights allows customers to see multiple products at once while creating movement throughout the display.
Add a Recipe or Pairing Suggestion
Color attracts customers, but inspiration drives sales.
Consider including a simple recipe card, serving suggestion, or pairing idea alongside your display. Giving shoppers an easy way to use the product helps them move from browsing to purchasing.
Keep It Simple
One of the most common merchandising mistakes is trying to include too many colors, products, and accessories in a single display.
Choose one color story and commit to it.
A focused display often feels more polished, more intentional, and more premium than one packed with products competing for attention.
The goal isn't to fill every inch of shelf space. It's to create a display that makes customers stop, smile, and explore.
Sometimes all it takes is a little color.