True Love Coffee Co.

I was asked to provide copy for an emerging coffee brand with a whole lotta heart. This included a brand story, product titles, individual roast descriptions, coffee bag copy, pitches and taglines, etc. What’s more, we worked with a graphic designer to develop 1960’s era tiki-bar visual cues that were wellsprings of inspiration—think coconut cocktail mugs, Hawaiian volcanoes, retro surfer babes and cherry red sunsets. So with Donn the Beachcomber as my guide, I used verbiage that fit snugly with this art direction, while maintaining a wholesome tone to ground the brand in words and phrases as authentic as their coffee.

Enjoy!

Specialty coffee meets specialty copy.

With bright red bags it’s hard to miss True Love coffee on the shelves, and I aimed for equally bold copy to match. Moreover, it was important to create a uniformly integrated digital and social voice that represented True Love’s humble value set. And these directives paid off—they’ve secured recurrent accounts with a handful of prominent boutique coffee locales (Daydream, SQIRL LA, and Station Craft to name a few), with plenty more to come.

Having seven original roast offerings is a feat for any coffee brand, so it was a treat to furnish each one with some personality. The goal was to balance two distinct voices—creative and informational—in a way that didn’t clutter the page and confuse the reader. Playing with regular and italic type and page placement, the two voices commune in a comfortable way. See below!

It starts with a cherry, and ends with a trove of tropical flavors and spices waltzing around your mouth.

 

Copy comes in many tones. Whatever your needs may be, whatever story you’re itching to tell, the right tone of voice can make all the difference. See below a few examples of how an authentic coffee brand found their voice in a noisy market.

A tasty campaign that lands a punch.

 
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