Ye’ai Tea
From Mountain Origins to Meaningful Ritual.
This project was about creating the brand for a pu’er tea sourced from the founder’s family region in Yunnan, China, and preparing it for the European market. The goal was to build a clear brand identity across packaging, website, and social media that shows the tea’s origin, authenticity, and modern appeal.
Pu’er tea is still quite unfamiliar to many people in Europe, and the idea of aged tea can be confusing. The challenge was to present the tea in a way that feels trustworthy and premium without using obvious cultural clichés, while making the brand easy to understand and approachable for new customers.
Seeing guests taste, ask questions, and respond in real time revealed what felt premium, what felt unfamiliar, and what needed clearer explanation. That became a key input for how we present the brand in a modern, approachable way.
The ceremony went better than I expected. Pu’er is bitter and earthy, so I thought it might be polarizing, but most people were genuinely into it. Once the founder explained the story behind the tea and how aging works, the taste felt less “weird” and more intentional. Here’s what I learned from their feedback:
In the early exploration phase, I considered a minimal wordmark approach. However, “Ye’ai” has a non-native pronunciation that may feel unfamiliar to a European audience. Relying only on typography would make early recognition more difficult. For this reason, I developed a combined logomark and wordmark. The wordmark ensures clarity, while the logomark adds a distinctive visual anchor and connects the brand to its cultural origin.
Each packaging variant uses a distinct shade to signal its stage, making the product range easy to understand at a glance while staying rooted in the tea itself.
For Ye’ai Tea, social is not trend-driven. It is a slow storytelling channel designed to build trust.
The content focuses on three areas:
After conducting initial marketing research and gathering feedback from the tea ceremony and friends, I noticed a consistent pattern: people were curious about pu’er tea, but unsure. The hesitation was mainly around aging, authenticity, and how to brew it correctly. Based on these insights, I structured the website flow to support learning before purchasing. Instead of pushing users directly into the Shop, the navigation allows them to explore Tea Knowledge and Our Story first, building understanding and trust.
Each path intentionally leads back to the Shop once uncertainty is reduced. The flow reflects the brand positioning of Ye’ai Tea: origin-led, transparent, and educational rather than trend-driven.