🚀 Day 2 of my 90-Day Email Design Challenge!
Today I designed a cart reminder email for a whey protein brand. The goal? Get people back to finish their purchase.
Most cart emails fail because they’re generic:
“Hey, you forgot something.” 😬
That’s it.
🎨 Bold, dark design
It feels serious and performance-driven matching the mindset of someone committed to fitness.
🤝 Trust cues
Customer support, authentic products, and real reviews reduce hesitation and make it easier to click “buy.”
Day 1 of my 90-day email design challenge.
This one’s for a cookware brand — but the goal wasn’t to sell pots.
It was to sell the feeling of cooking, warmth, and home.
Good morning and happy new week
I almost stopped posting.
Not because I was lazy but because I realized something:
Posting randomly won’t make you better.
Consistency will.
So I’m testing a theory.
Starting Monday - today:
1 email design. Every day. For 90 days.
Second email for this brand 🍪
Designed as a gentle follow-up, not a pushy cart reminder.
“Your cookies miss you already” adds emotion, the visuals spark craving, and the CTA makes returning effortless.
Human copy + clean design = higher engagement & conversions 📩✨
Design question 👇
How do you turn scrolling into craving?
For this Ben’s Cookies concept, I used bold type, warm reds, and chunky visuals to recreate that “you smell it before you see it” moment. 🍪
Second email for Hermès, but this time I let the design slow down.
Soft tones. Clear hierarchy. Space to breathe.
The kind of email that doesn’t rush you — it invites you
I imagined someone opening this email in a quiet moment.
No rush. No noise. Just clean design, thoughtful spacing, and a product that speaks for itself.
That’s the story this email was meant to tell. 📧✨
#EmailMarketing#emaildesigner
I imagined someone opening this email in a quiet moment.
No rush. No noise. Just clean design, thoughtful spacing, and a product that speaks for itself.
That’s the story this email was meant to tell. 📧✨
#EmailMarketing#emaildesigner