
The Brief
Ember is a direct-to-consumer fragrance brand founded by a perfumer who spent a decade creating for fashion houses before deciding to launch under her own name. The brief was to build a launch identity that could compete visually with established niche fragrance brands — Byredo, Le Labo, Diptyque — while signalling something distinctly different: warmth, movement, and a rejection of the cold minimalism that dominates the category.
The Challenge
Fragrance is the hardest category to brand digitally. You can’t communicate smell. Everything depends on the ability to create a sensory world through visual and motion language alone — to make someone feel the product before they ever receive it. The risk with motion identity in particular is that it becomes gratuitous: movement for its own sake signals nothing.
Identity Foundation
We started with the product itself. The founding perfumer described her process as “slow combustion” — layering materials that evolve over time rather than hitting hard and fading fast. That idea became the conceptual engine for everything: the identity needed to feel like something building, warming, deepening rather than arriving fully formed.
The logotype is set in a custom-modified humanist serif — letterforms with slightly flared terminals that suggest heat distortion without being literally illustrative. The wordmark is always set at a size that allows the subtle details to read. Never condensed, never stacked.
Motion Language
We developed a motion system built on three principles: slow start, organic ease, residual movement. Nothing snaps. Nothing bounces. Every transition begins almost imperceptibly and accelerates gently, like heat rising. Text elements have a subtle thermal shimmer on hover — a single-axis distortion that reads as warmth rather than glitch.
The hero sequence on the site is a 40-second ambient loop — macro footage of amber resin dissolving in oil, graded to match the brand palette and scored with a single cello note that sustains and slowly harmonises. It runs in the background, playing without sound by default, and creates the single most effective piece of fragrance communication we have ever built.
Digital Launch Assets
We produced the full suite of digital launch materials across Instagram, email, and paid social. All motion assets share the same vocabulary: slow reveals, warm colour grades, no hard cuts. The email launch sequence achieved a 44% open rate on the day of release — nearly four times the category average.
Packaging Translation
We consulted on the packaging brief as part of the engagement, translating the motion principles into static form: embossed logomark on matte amber glass, a wax seal in the brand’s signature deep terracotta, and inner packaging printed on uncoated kraft with a single-colour letterpress mark.
Outcome
Ember sold out its first production run of 600 units in 11 days. The brand was covered in Vogue, Wallpaper, and Hypebeast within the first month. The founder has since closed a seed round to fund the second collection. The motion identity system has become the reference we send to any client briefing us on luxury brand launch work.
Project type
Motion
Company name
Ember
Industry
Beauty & Fragrance



