Five Concepts
Heritage Design Explorations
Concept I
Compass Rose
Heritage Bottler Style
Inspired by Gordon & MacPhail and Wemyss Malts. Deep forest green authority meets antique gold craft. An 8-pointed compass rose motif guides every page — unhurried, graceful, unmistakably Scottish.
Concept II
The Iron Gauger
Victorian Industrial
The boldest concept. Cast iron, riveted steel, brass fittings, gaslight amber glow. Every panel feels forged from Scottish iron. Machine specification plates for products. Victorian industrial Scotland in its full power.
Concept III
The Smuggler's Tale
Historical Narrative
The gauger story IS the design. Aged parchment, official Excise stamps, case file numbers, ledger lines, wanted notices. The brand origin told through the documents of those who tried — and often failed — to enforce the law.
Concept IV
Highland Light
Landscape Photography Hero
Scotland as the brand identity. Full-bleed highland landscapes, lochs, glens, heather moorland — the photographs carry the weight. Minimal text, cinematic scale. Like a luxury travel magazine, but the destination is a dram.
Concept V
The Dunnage
Craft & Atmosphere
The physical world of whisky making. Dark stone walls, barrel rows, copper pot stills, amber lantern glow. Like Compass Box but darker and more intimate. The smell of oak and spirit. Cask numbers as credentials.
About this series: Each concept draws on independent bottler websites (Compass Box, Gordon & MacPhail, Douglas Laing, Cadenhead's), real Scottish landscape and distillery photography via Unsplash, and primary-source research into the history of Scotland's Gaugers — the Crown Excise Officers whose legacy, bribes, and cat-and-mouse battles with illicit distillers gave us our name.