Chanel No. 5: How a Perfume Bottle Became a Century-Old Trademark

Famous Trademarks

Chanel No. 5 was launched in 1921. The square bottle, beveled stopper, and minimal label have remained unchanged for over a century. That consistency is not merely aesthetic — it is a legal strategy.

The Bottle as Trademark

Gabrielle Chanel drew inspiration from men’s whisky bottles, rejecting ornate designs. Design rights at launch have since expired. What replaced them is trademark protection built on 100 years of consumer recognition. European trademark registrations: EUIPO.

The Formula as Trade Secret

The fragrance composition is protected as a trade secret — never disclosed publicly. Like Coca-Cola’s formula, non-disclosure prevents competitors from replicating the exact scent while maintaining the mystique that has sustained the brand for a century.

Consistency as Legal Strategy

Design rights expire. A mark used consistently for 100 years accumulates consumer recognition that no competitor can replicate. Changing the design resets the clock. Keeping it builds permanence that outlasts any fixed-term right.


For informational purposes only. Not legal advice.

コメント

Copied title and URL