Celebrating 25 years of Starbucks (mostly) red holiday cups
How did a coffee cup become a cultural icon? Let’s take a look back at 25 years of Starbucks holiday cups.
When Starbucks introduced its first holiday cups back in 1997, the word “selfie” had not yet been invented. Facebook and Twitter were still years away. Still, those holiday cups created buzz.
Sandy Nelson, then a Starbucks designer, created that first set of holiday cups, selected from dozens of design concepts. They weren’t red – but instead were wrapped like a gift in rich shades of magenta, sapphire, and emerald and purple. The design featured a linoleum block-style pattern with swirls and hand-drawn holly leaves flecked with coffee beans.
Nelson remembers the first time she saw customers carrying cups with her designs. She was visiting Anchorage, Alaska for Thanksgiving, and stepped off the plane to see a Starbucks kiosk piled high with stacks of colorful cups she had designed.
“I thought, wow, this is big,” Nelson said. “But I had no idea what was ahead.”
The next year, the holiday cups made an even bigger splash as customers were invited to “embrace the warmth” of the holidays with a cup in purple hues. Then in 1999, the cups featured a candy-apple red design for the first time, and a new icon was born. Before long, pop culture websites featured countdown clocks anticipating when cups would be “red again,” and the cups popped up everywhere from nascent social media platforms to late-night talk shows. Year after year, the excitement around the holiday cup seemed to grow and the cup itself became emblematic of the season.
“What’s happened now in popular culture is that the appearance of the red cup signals to people that it’s time to celebrate the holidays,” said Sandy Nelson. “Who would have thought 25 years ago that would happen?”
This year, Starbucks is introducing a new set of four designs for the holidays, wrapped like a gift for their customers just as they were 25 years ago.
“Looking back at all the years of holiday cups, you can see the commitment to design and artistry and all things handcrafted,” said Gary Jacobson, Starbucks creative director for this year’s holiday campaign. “I think that’s why they have become part of a lot of people’s holiday traditions. They invite people in because each new design captures a moment in time with its own unique take on the holidays.”
Read on for a look at the last 25 years of holiday cups, plus this year’s new design:
1997
With the first holiday cups, customers could enjoy a Christmas Blend brewed coffee in one of four jewel-toned hues.
1998
Stores were adorned in deep purple and sepia tones with an elegant holiday cup featuring swirling snowflakes.
1999
The classic candy-apple red Starbucks holiday cup makes its first appearance in this whimsical design with black line-drawings of snowflakes, stockings and winter celebrations.
2000
“Coffeetown” was the theme for the Y2K cup, depicting a whimsical village of coffee pots, set against a glittering nighttime sky.
2001
Giving the gift of Starbucks became easier than ever this holiday with the introduction of the first Starbucks Gift Cards. The cups themselves are designed to look like a present, trimmed with green and red ribbon and old-fashioned postage stamps.
2002
Peppermint Mocha makes its debut this year, and a cup design that featured white line art, an illustration style that returned again in 2005 and 2016.
2003
Shadows dance across a fanciful scene with shimmering stars and snowflakes.
2004
The Starbucks logo is reminiscent of an evergreen wreath in this year’s cup design. The cup was also the star of a Starbucks video featuring the cup fixed atop the roof of a yellow taxi speeding through the streets of San Francisco.
2005
This nostalgic design features white woodcut-style drawings and a string of holiday lights twinkling along the rim, along with a reminder that “It only happens once a year.”
2006
Illustrations that appear as intricate cut paper silhouettes gather in traditional holiday tableaux.
2007
Ice skaters twirl on a frozen pond as snowflakes gently fall in this quiet winter scene.
2008
A field of reindeer and a single white dove are depicted in a moonlit woodland landscape with an overlay of a cozy knitted pattern.
2009
Caramel Brulée Latte makes its debut this year, along with a cup design that features cut-paper ornaments inscribed with the words “joy, hope, love, light, peace” hanging on sprigs of evergreen.
2010
The cups take on a more modern vibe with new holiday characters catching snowflakes in a palette of red, white and gray.
2011
Carolers sing, an ice skater spins, and a dog sleds down a hill with these series of three holiday cups. Customers make these merry scenes come to life with Starbucks Cup Magic, an augmented reality app.
2012
The holiday characters, including a jaunty snowman, come in for their close-up in this design series with bold accents of navy and gold.
2013
The cup features a swoop of coffee cherries, coffee flowers and vintage ornaments painted in a deep garnet with touches of gold.
2014
“Let there be bright” is the theme for this year’s holiday, with fanciful brushstrokes in bold colors, the perfect complement to the new Chestnut Praline Latte.
2015
The cup features a two-toned ombré design, with a bright poppy color on top that shaded into a darker cranberry below.
2016
For the first time, Starbucks features customer-created holiday cups with 13 designs from six countries around the world, all with hand-drawn white against a red background.
2017
Starbucks unveils its first white holiday cup that customers could color in themselves, with a pair of hands connected with swirling ribbons and splashes of red and green. Later in the season, a red cup debuted with a white heart inviting customers to “Give Good.”
2018
The suite of cups celebrated the spirit of yesteryear with a modern twist, with doses of vintage colors and patterns and reinterpreted with graphic flair. The set of four designs featured snippets of Starbucks holidays past – a star, a branch of coffee cherries and a flame.
2019
A perfectly wrapped gift inspired this series of four designs in our signature colors of red, white and Starbucks green. Typography is used as the main illustrative element for three of the designs, with whole letters playfully danced like musical notes (and even sprang to life on Instagram using augmented reality). Irish Cream Cold Brew made its debut this season in a special holiday cold cup with dancing letters that spelled “merry coffee.”
2020
Designers started with little ribbons like washi tape (a decorative, adhesive tape) and wrapped them in different ways on cups. They brought in greens and a shade of red that’s a little brighter than the shade Starbucks may be famous for to give it an extra pop. The cups reminded customers to “Carry the Merry.”
2021
With shimmering ribbons, a splash of color and a sprinkle of stars – this year’s designs are wrapped up like gifts for the holidays. This year’s theme features festive colors of red, green and white with playful touches of lilac.
2022
The classic holiday red and Starbucks green are joined with accents of mint and sparkles in this set of cup designs, a perfect way to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Peppermint Mocha.