
Here’s another creative direction that sits in the same visual and conceptual world—sensory, sculptural, and slightly surreal—without repeating the ice motif directly: Concept: “Suspended in Resin” A perfume bottle is embedded inside a thick slab of translucent resin, cast mid-pour so that movement feels frozen but fluid. Inside the resin, delicate natural elements—petals, citrus peels, thin branches, spices—appear caught in motion, some partially blurred or distorted by the material’s density. The bottle is slightly tilted, not perfectly centered, creating tension between precision and organic chaos. Tiny air bubbles and striations in the resin add texture and imperfection, echoing the way ice cracks and traps light, but with a warmer, more amber-toned feel. The slab rests on a reflective surface, with soft directional light passing through it to create refracted shadows and glowing edges. The background remains minimal and warm-neutral, allowing the material and contents to carry the mood. Why it works as a sibling concept: • Preserves the idea of scent made physical • Uses encapsulation and suspension as metaphor • Emphasizes materiality, light, and texture • Feels editorial, tactile, and timeless rather than gimmicky If you want a sharper contrast instead, this same setup could shift cooler (clear resin, steel surface) or darker (smoked resin, black background) while keeping the same visual DNA.