Wednesday, 17 March 2010

Bond No. 9 High Line


Found this fragrance brand that uses a New York neighborhood as an inspiration for its brand packaging. Really helpful!

http://www.thedieline.com/blog/2010/03/bond-no-9-high-line.html

Thursday, 11 March 2010

My target audience


After reading many many articles, Mintel reports and visual research, I've finally managed to pin down on my target audience for the fragrance brand that I'm going to be creating. This is the consumer lifestyle board that explains my target consumer. This is based  on a fictitious person I had in mind although, Stuart suggested that I take an actual person in mind and make a consumer lifestyle board, so thats in the process.

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Serge Mansau


Serge Mansau is an internationally recognised designer in the perfume industry, where he has been designing bottles for famous couturiers since 1963. Containers for the most celebrated fragrances have come out of the studio of this magician of the transparent (Hermès, Kenzo, Cerruti and Azzaro).With all this experience, Serge Mansau is an expert when it comes to glass. He explores it with master glassmakers and is familiar with all its physical possibilities and limits. This explains his great skill with the material, and the freedom with which he reinvents sculpture. Serge Mansau has a liking for marginal approaches and the impulse of intuitive gestures. He kept his artistic productions secret for a long time. Now revealed to the general public, his works form part of the history of contemporary glass.

Serge Mansau An artist with a passion for theatre and stage engineering from which he draws inspiration for his creations. His works are instinctive and spontaneous; they are the fruit of total artistic freedom.

(http://www.beautrading.nl/pdf/artist/Mansau_Serge_GB.pdf)


Wednesday, 17 February 2010

Poison and Euphoria



Over the past few weeks, I've been looking at the fragrance market, the trends used, the visual language used by designer brands etc. I created a small comparative analysis between two luxury fragrances- 'Poison' by Christian Dior which is an older, more classic fragrance and 'Euphoria' by Calvin Klein which is a newer fragrance.

The first of the Poison collection was launched in 1985 and was followed by four other versions - Tendre Poison (1994), Hypnotic Poison (1998), Pure Poison (2004) and the latest being Midnight Poison (2007). The original Poison was a very strong fragrance and it created a great stir among consumers as women were forbidden to appear wearing Poison in public.
"Moreover, Dior Poison appeared to be the first fragrance of the French House that did not have the word 'Dior' in its name; the 'God Father' of this new fragrance was the French poet Paul Valéry who wrote sometime back that 'perfume is poison for heart'. Provocative and intensive aroma that arouses so emotional responses was called 'Poison' not just for nothing. This bright, charismatic and seducing aroma is difficult to ignore and forget. Rodger Morris, the

President to Parfums Christian Dior, remarked at a time that so conflicting name of Dior Poison perfume was intended purposefully, "I was realizing that we could afford being conflicting to the extent while the aroma seems gracious." (http://www.luxemag.org/skin-body/dior-poison.html)


The bottle shape is inspired by Cinderella's Pumpkin coach, and there are various versions of it. The collectors version of the bottle carries fine tendril shape designs on its surface.


The second perfume I looked at for my analysis was 'Euphoria' by Calvin Klein which was launched in the year 2005. Euphoria was created as a lighter fragrance to suit Asian preferences although it was launched globally. There were many versions of this fragrance as well - Euphoria, 'Euphoria Blossom' and 'Euphoria Spring temptation'. This was targeted at modern young women and was a sweet-smelling, light, floral perfume. The bottle shape is inspired by the orchid flower about to bloom, uses light shades of pink and the collectors version of this bottle was decorated using accents of swarowski crystals.


Sunday, 10 January 2010

Lux: Indian caleidoscope






While I've been pondering over what possible themes and inspirations I could use for the creation of a luxury perfume brand, I came across this very interesting article about how the LUX brand is diversifying from a soap brand to a cosmetic brand for the indian audience. I've been trying to trace the designers of this range of packaging.


Here's the link to the article.

http://popsop.com/6666