
Strategic Branding · Strategic Website
About + Pain Point
Eterna Studio
Eterna Studio is a Miami-based interior design studio founded by a Russian designer with a background in high-end residential and commercial projects. The studio operates in a specific market gap, as Miami's design culture typically defaults to either stark minimalism or maximalist opulence, leaving very little room for work that sits comfortably between those two extremes. Eterna Studio's positioning is built to occupy that exact space, creating interiors that read as luxurious without defaulting to excess, and deeply personal without losing the precision that high-end clients expect.
The brief addressed a clear competitive problem in a visually saturated Miami interior design market where brands typically compete on scale, extravagance, and visual noise. In that environment, a studio positioning itself around restraint and natural harmony lacks an existing visual language to borrow from without simply disappearing into generic minimalism. This created a very specific strategic question, which was how to build a brand identity that signals premium positioning and a distinct point of view in a market where those qualities are almost always communicated through excess.

Solution
Eterna Studio
The palm motif was chosen for a precise reason, as it connects the studio's geographic location to its design philosophy without requiring any explanation. A studio that describes itself as bringing natural harmony to Miami interiors needed a mark that made that connection visible instead of simply stating it. When combined with a clean serif typeface and an oval frame, the logo holds its own at a premium level without borrowing from the maximalist aesthetic the studio is positioned against. This combination signals belonging in the high-end market while clearly communicating a distinct point of view within it.
The palette was built to solve the positioning problem visually, using caput mortuum as the primary tone to provide the depth and authority the high-end market requires without reading as cold or sterile. Artichoke tones introduce the natural reference central to the studio's positioning without decorative excess, while almond ties the system together as a neutral that keeps the identity light and open. This entire combination sits outside both dominant positions in the Miami market, as it avoids both the stark white of minimalist studios and the saturated palettes of more extravagant competitors. To support this, the brand pattern organizes the palm icon and logotype into a structured grid, giving the identity a system that holds across physical and digital applications instead of forcing the primary mark to carry all the weight on its own.


THE OUTCOME
Eterna Studio
The branding shifted the quality of inquiries well before it shifted the quantity, with clients who reached out after the rebrand already using the exact language of the brief, specifically words like natural, calm, and considered. They arrived having fully understood the studio's position without needing it explained, which completely changed the nature of those initial touchpoints.
In fact, one client cited the brand specifically as the reason she chose Eterna over three other shortlisted studios with comparable portfolios, noting that while the others looked expensive, Eterna looked like it understood what she actually wanted. That remains the clearest measure of an identity doing strategic work, as the right client arrives already convinced, while the wrong one naturally self-selects out before the first conversation even happens.







