No.3 Gin debuts 500ml bottle 7th May, 2021 by Nicola Carruthers
Berry Bros & Rudd has launched its No.3 London Dry Gin in a new 500ml bottle across the UK and Europe.
The new 500ml bottle size allows consumers to “trade up at less of a risk”
The new bottle comes in the same hexagonal design as the 700ml format.
Berry Bros & Rudd unveiled a new bottle design for No.3 Gin, along with a new campaign, titled The Art of Perfection, in 2019. The new bottle was designed by Stranger & Stranger.
The family-owned firm decided to release the new 500ml size to meet consumer demand for a smaller bottle due to changes in consumption habits.
Theatre has driven many a man to drink; for Simon Berry it has driven him from it. The former chairman of Berry Bros & Rudd, London’s oldest wine merchant, wanted to be an actor. “Just one problem,”
This central London oasis is my best worst kept secret
Credit: Saint Jacques
I discovered St Jacques on the Glorious Twelfth; that bright new day that marked not the first slain grouse (as on 12 August), but the first day of freedom. Rain or shine, howling gales, outdoor heaters or no, we must now always mark 12 April with a long al fresco lunch.
I was en route to dinner and had to drop in to this St James’s Street establishment in London to scoop up a pal.
He was still at lunch; a beacon to all of us as to how to mark the day appropriately. I was dragged to his table where he and his friends were in that quite tiresome state where they were so far ahead on the drinks front that endeavouring to catch them up would have required shots.
Drinking to success: The amount of fine wine traded last year, rather than consumed, was up 70 per cent on 2019
It is time to raise a glass to the future. And if it is full of wine, you may consider joining a growing army of fans turning this pleasure into a shrewd investment.
Lockdown fever has resulted in increasing numbers of people drinking wine at home. And it is not just cheap bottles of plonk we are buying – but also the finest vintages which some are acquiring for investment purposes.
The amount of fine wine traded last year, rather than consumed, was up 70 per cent on 2019 according to wine market tracker Liv-ex. It monitors the prices of a thousand investment quality wines.