Esmé’s Lattes
Brand identity, visual language, and experiential design for a sensory luxury coffee retreat situated on a private island destination.- Brand Identity- Experiential Design- Packaging- Art Direction- Hospitality- Food & Beverage
About the projectConceived as a concept projects focusing in on this immersive resort style experience built to hold Esmé’s Lattes which represents a highly specialized approach to luxury experiential hospitality.
New brand positioning was developed to communicate an atmosphere of a 1920s summer that never quite ended, elevating the act of coffee-making into an old-world culinary art form where every latte is treated like your last sip.To capture the core friction between rigid historical glamour and organic fluidity, abstract biomorphic single-line forms were developed to mimic the natural motion of pouring milk. These visceral visual elements are paired with structural Art Deco typography to weave the brand's narrative across menus, packaging, and environmental signage.
Extensive visual research into traditional latte art, the natural flow of rosettas, tulips, and swans, was abstracted and distilled into continuous, single-stroke line drawings. This approach moves away from literal representation, instead trying to capture unique concepts we can take that feel brand ready.
A high-contrast color palette of Deep Navy, Rich Gold, Beige, and Warm Brown was constructed to maximize structural contrast and control visual hierarchy across the island’s touchpoints.
Typographically, a highly structural Art Deco display serif is paired with a utilitarian geometric sans-serif, bridging the 1920s era with modern luxury while grounding the fluid illustrations.
The primary logo system marries the signature biomorphic mark with this foundational typography. The resulting layout subtly mimics the silhouette of 1920s cloche headwear elements, allowing the fluid element to be extracted as a standalone minimalist emblem that is physically recreated in the foam of the menu items.
A bespoke art direction strategy was established to control the brand’s atmosphere across all mediums. Cooler color temperatures and a subtle, grainy texture are applied to close-up culinary photography to enhance tactility, while rich, heavy warm tones are utilized to set the physical, sunlit scene of the resort space.
The visual language extends seamlessly into physical collateral. Takeaway packaging utilizes the brand’s secondary colors and prominent biomorphic linework to create striking tactile objects. Menus are meticulously divided into curated experiences, presented on a crisp, typography-driven layout.
Positioning the retreat as “The Last Trip You’ll Ever Take,” high-end editorial spreads and gallery-style poster campaigns were developed. By framing individual latte art forms as exclusive fine art, the campaign cements the island as the ultimate sensory sanctuary.
Prompting is Not Strategy (Why AI is the New Canva and How to Actually Use It)
Welcome, Builders, to the very first installment of From Deck to Desk—the space where we take high-level strategy (the deck) and figure out how to actually execute it in the real world (the desk).
There is no better way to kick off this series than addressing the elephant in the room: the growing misconception across the industry—from local small businesses to enterprise-level corporations—that software can substitute for strategy. We are watching people fall into the exact same trap they did a decade ago: assuming that access to a tool equals creative mastery.
The current generative AI design craze is not a structural revolution; it is the modern iteration of Canva. It is a system engineered to give non-designers a quick, low-barrier, cost-effective fix. But treating design as a series of shortcuts is a dangerous paradigm. AI tricks people into bypassing the critical thinking phase. While these tools can democratize the production of raw imagery, they cannot democratize taste.
An algorithm can provide infinite options, but it takes a trained eye to bring the restraint, hierarchy, and visual discipline needed to build a cohesive brand world.
For all the Builders out there—whether you are a seasoned creator or a small business owner trying to figure out your visual identity—here is a breakdown of where AI falls short in the real world, followed by concrete steps on how to actually use these tools to win.
The Illusion of the Shortcut
AI design sells the illusion of an easy fix. It convinces businesses that skipping the foundational process is fine as long as the end result looks polished. But a polished asset without a strategy is just expensive noise.
We recently saw this "shortcut mentality" backfire with Under Armour. A director created a commercial featuring Anthony Joshua that was marketed as "predominantly AI." The industry quickly realized the AI had essentially just re-skinned the live-action work of human videographers without permission. When you rely on AI to do the heavy lifting, you aren't designing a brand; you are generating an isolated file built on the uncredited backs of others.
A "Strategy First" design philosophy means understanding the brand before designing is non-negotiable. AI cannot ask why a brand exists or who its specific subcultures are. It delivers a fast answer to an unexamined problem.
🛠️ Step 1: The "Strategy Before Prompt" Audit
Before you open an AI image generator or design software, force yourself to step away from the screen and answer three questions. If you can't answer these, you aren't ready to prompt.
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Who exactly am I talking to? (Define the subculture or demographic, not just "everyone").
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What is the core feeling this asset needs to evoke? (e.g., "mid-century optimism" or "clinical trust").
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What is the call to action? (Where does the viewer go after they see this?)
The Scarcity of Taste: Knowing When Enough is Enough
The biggest flaw in AI outputs isn’t a lack of detail; it’s a lack of restraint. Non-designers often don't know "when enough is enough."
Look at the Toys R Us promotional video generated using OpenAI’s Sora. The brand released an AI-generated spot that audiences rejected as "soulless" and "creepy." It was highly detailed, but it lacked human empathy.
Taste is the ability to filter. To understand where AI fails, you have to look at the physical reality of a brand. During the development of Fret & Fiber—a guitar strap starter kit—the challenge was bridging the gap between the product and the musician's tactile experience. An AI can generate a pretty mockup of a guitar strap, but it can't engineer the unboxing experience. The breakthrough was designing a matchbook-style pick holder to accompany the kit—a physical, psychological connection point. AI doesn't understand the physical weight of a product in a consumer's hand. It only understands pixels.
🛠️ Step 2: Engineer the Tactile Reality
Do not let your brand live purely on a screen. AI cannot design a physical feeling.
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Identify one physical touchpoint your customer will interact with (packaging, a business card, a menu, a sticker).
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Ask yourself: What does this feel like in their hands?
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Design a small, unexpected moment of delight specifically for that physical item (like the matchbook-style pick holder). Keep it simple, intentional, and entirely human.
Bypassing Ecosystems for a Cheap Fix
Even massive studios fall for the trap of the AI shortcut, mistaking algorithmic noise for intentional design.
When Marvel used generative AI to create the opening credits for Secret Invasion, they claimed the artifact-ridden, morphing visuals fit the show's "shapeshifting" theme. Fans and artists alike rejected it as a trend-chasing gimmick that lacked distinct editorial vision.
Design is rarely about a single image; it is about building cohesive systems across digital and physical touchpoints. Take a localized project like the wayfinding ecosystem for Bar Under the Sun (BUS). A project like this requires designing physical "Bus Stops" and "Crossroads" signage that guides human traffic, and then translating that spatial awareness into a mobile app interface. You cannot prompt an AI to solve a localized, spatial wayfinding problem that spans concrete reality and digital screens. AI can make a cool graphic, but it takes a Creative Strategist to build an ecosystem.
🛠️ Step 3: Map the Digital-to-Physical Ecosystem
Stop looking at your brand as a series of isolated images.
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Draw a timeline of how a customer interacts with your brand from start to finish.
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List the touchpoints (e.g., Instagram Post -> Website -> Physical Location -> Follow-up Email).
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Audit the transitions. Make sure the typography, voice, and visual geometry are identical across all of them. Consistency builds trust; AI inconsistency destroys it.
How to Actually Use AI (The Sandbox Approach)
Does this mean AI has no place in the professional toolkit? Not at all. But amateurs use AI to create the final product; professionals use it to accelerate the initial mess.
In a professional workflow, AI serves as a high-speed sandbox. It is a tool for rapid prototyping, mood-boarding, and conceptual stress-testing. If you are exploring a specific aesthetic, use AI to burn through bad ideas quickly so you can get to the raw, human-driven insights faster. It is an execution assistant, not the creator.
🛠️ Step 4: The AI Sandbox Protocol
Use AI to fail fast, not to finish the job.
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Generate Volume: Type your wildest, most experimental ideas into an AI generator to see what they look like instantly.
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Extract the Good: Look at the generated images and pull out one specific element that works (a color palette, a layout structure, a geometric shape).
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Execute Manually: Discard the AI image completely. Open Illustrator, Figma, or your workspace of choice, and build the final asset yourself using that one extracted element as inspiration.
Ultimately, AI design will serve a filtering purpose in our industry. It will commoditize the generic, low-effort assets that businesses used to buy cheap anyway. But in doing so, it draws a sharp, undeniable line between commodity graphic generation and high-level strategy.
When the market is flooded with synthetic, over-rendered AI imagery, real, human-driven design stands out. A computer can generate a pretty picture, but it takes a Builder to architect a brand world.
Keep building. I'll see you at the desk.