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Rosé Sauvage

Process behind designing a perfume brand

Skills: Photoshop, Cinema 4D, Zbrush

About The Project

INSPIRATION

If I were to create a perfume company one day, I would name it Rosé Sauvage. I’ve always been captivated by the scent of perfumes and colognes—especially the rose-based fragrances found in Middle Eastern countries. Their bottles are often beautifully crafted and intricately detailed, which inspired me to design one of my own.

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Process

HOW IT STARTS

When I began designing the bottle, my initial idea was to shape it like a rose. However, it never quite felt right. I continued exploring concepts, but none of them truly resonated with me.

That changed when my roommate returned from a trip home and brought her grandma’s rice-flour rose cookies, a traditional Iranian dessert. They were some of the best treats I’ve ever had—lightly fragrant in both taste and scent. As I looked at them more closely, I noticed the delicate patterns her grandma had created using a needle to form the intricate details. In that moment, everything clicked. Rather than forcing a literal rose shape, I could base the bottle design on the textures and patterns of those cookies.

Some of the cookies featured circular, precise motifs, while others resembled a more structured floral pattern. These subtle, handcrafted designs felt far more authentic to the essence I want Rosé Sauvage to embody.

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SKETCHES

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Style

COLOR, PATTERNS

It took me some time to determine not only the color palette for the bottles, but also the overall direction of the design. I experimented with various lighting setups, materials, and compositions—each significantly influencing the final outcome. For the box, I used ZBrush and applied a black-and-white alpha image, converting it into a 3D pattern to add depth and texture to the packaging.

Portfolio

Check it out!

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