Pepper just got a DTC glow-up
When’s the last time you thought about pepper? Designers working in the consumer packaged goods category have reimagined many a pantry staple over the past several years, including olive oil, tinned fish, and even chili crisp, but pepper has remained as forgotten as it is ubiquitous. A playfully chunky new brand is giving the category design intentionality, functionality, and visual appeal—and could point to where food brand design is headed. Michael Laniak [Photo: Cory Vanderploeg/courtesy Milly] Michael Laniak, a former line cook, launched Milly on May 12 as a result of his failed attempt to source pepper in the same way he could olive oil or sea salt. Milly sells only whole peppercorns—black, white, and green—along with namesake matching pepper mills in coordinated colors. The products are available on the company’s website, starting at $14 for one tin of whole peppercorns, $28 for a pepper and mill set, and $78 for the trio of peppers and mills. Considering there’s nothing else quite like it, what we’re seeing on a small scale is the reinvention of a category, and it’s just begging for well-packaged competitors to vie for counter space next to some Graza and a well of Maldon salt. [Photo: Cory Vanderploeg/courtesy Milly] Its branding and positioning are what make this new product notable, with a hand-lettered logo and thoughtful design system that refocuses what many might dismiss as a good-enough spice into an experience you might want to consider more thoughtfully (and either gift or spend more on). [Photo: Cory Vanderploeg/courtesy Milly] The logo itself draws a playful contrast to category competitors, which offer run-of-the-mill serifs on white or black backgrounds (or red, for McCormick). Milly’s in-house designer, Cassie Scowcroft, hand-lettered the final design, which has an organic, analog look, thanks to the high-contrast weight variations of its strokes, a mix of upper- and lowercase letters, and a script y. It’s a nod to the fact that, according to t