Authored By: Rudraksh Sharma
Amity University, Noida
Trade dress is a functional, consumer-oriented aspect of trademark law: it safeguards the look and “feel” of a product or service so that individuals may easily know where it originated without necessarily reading a name or logo each time. Consider the distinctive shape of a bottle, the color blocking of a package, a store’s arrangement, or even the décor that announces a specific chain—those are the types of signals trade dress can fill in when they reveal source, as opposed to mere decoration. The underlying mission is simple but essential: avoid confusion in the market and halt copycat presentations that ride on brand goodwill to confuse consumers.12
Here in the United States, this protection primarily runs through the Lanham Act, and more specifically Section 43(a), which allows owners to sue for infringement without even formal federal registration of the trade dress. That’s important because it acknowledges that brand identity frequently resides in the overall image and look, not just in logos or words. Nevertheless, two guardrails are essential: the asserted trade dress must be distinctive, and it must not be functional in a manner in which competitors must utilize it to compete effectively. U.S. courts then use the traditional “likelihood of confusion” analysis, inquiring whether typical consumers would likely be confused into believing that the accused presentation is associated with the lawful owner. When all those factors come together, the law gives protection to prevent copycats and maintain the trustworthiness of brand cues.3
Even if Indian law does not have a single, clear, standalone definition of “trade dress” like the U.S. Lanham Act, Indian courts and lawyers have constructed a solid protection regime on top by interpreting important definitions in the Trade Marks Act, 1999 collectively. The organization begins in Section 2: Section 2(zb) statutorily defines “trademark” in broad terms to encompass marks that can be graphically represented and that identify goods or services; Section 2(m) defines “mark” broadly to encompass devices, brands, labels, shapes of goods, packaging, or combinations of color; and Section 2(q) defines “package” to encompass a broad range of containers, coverings, wrappers, and closures. Read collectively, these provisions give the legal framework that allows courts to acknowledge and shield the overall visual image— what lawyers and judges alike refer to as trade dress—even in the absence of an explicit statutory designation.4
This interpretive strategy has teeth in reality. Indian courts have time and again stressed the fact that the overall get-up—color combinations, layout, shapes, and packaging—can serve as a badge of origin when consumers learn to identify that appearance with a single source. A classic definition is found in Colgate Palmolive Co. v. Anchor Health and Beauty Care, in which the court, dealing with a conflict over toothpaste color and packaging, defined trade dress as “the soul for identification of the goods as to its source and origin.” The court cautioned that copying such identifiers threatens to confuse “unwary customers,” especially long-time users who rely upon familiar visual signals on cluttered shelves. That definition has influenced subsequent decisions, affirming that trade dress isn’t a virtual beauty—it’s a functional indicator consumers employ to navigate decisions.
Practically, the two systems—U.S. and India—harmonize two objectives: maintaining the marketplace honest and leaving room for fair competition. The distinctiveness requirement guarantees protection only where presentation actually serves as a source identifier. Under U.S. law, distinctiveness may be inherent (where the appearance is different enough to become noticeable right from day one) or acquired (secondary meaning developed over time through use and advertising), and Indian courts also consider whether the relevant public has come to associate the appearance with one source. The functionality bar, common to both regimes, avoids monopolization over features competitors must use to sell their goods safely or efficiently—such as the shape of a bottle most convenient to stack, or color required to indicate a product’s type or performance. That way, trade dress doesn’t become a secret patent on useful features but continues to target source-indicating presentation.
In the end, the unifying tissue among these doctrines is trust on the part of the consumer. Trade dress law serves to make sure that, when consumers grab a familiar-seeming product or enter a familiar-seeming environment, they are truly encountering the producer to whom they are accustomed—not a false substitute cashing in on borrowed clothes. In America, the Lanham Act offers a straightforward avenue to enforce such expectations, judiciously circumscribed by distinctiveness and non-functionality. In India, even in the absence of a unified statutory definition, the broad language of the Trade Marks Act and judicial construction have established functionally equivalent protection: by enforcing the overall visual identity as a protectable indicator of source, courts protect the marketplace’s visual vocabulary from confusing appropriation. The outcome in both systems is one of balanced regulation that protects investment in brand-building and consumer understanding without leaving insufficient space for real, fair competition.
Reference(S):
1 https://www.iiprd.com/concept-of-trade-dress-in-india/
2 https://www.mondaq.com/india/trademark/1153586/protection-of-trade-dress-in-india
3 https://www.iiprd.com/concept-of-trade-dress-in-india/
4 https://blog.ipleaders.in/trade-dress-protection/





