Nine ways to put a code
where a story should live.
From a memorial plaque to a vineyard label to a child’s first drawing — Emori works wherever an object outlives the moment it came from.
Memorial plaques
A discreet metal plate on a bench, a tree, a headstone. Family scans it, sees a face, reads the story — a life worth more than dates on stone.
Wineries & spirits
The bottle becomes a chapter. Vineyard story, tasting notes from the winemaker, food pairings, the toast at the table. Updated vintage by vintage.
Premium retail
A leather tag, a wax seal, a hidden mark inside the box. Brand films, materials story, care guide. Authentication baked in.
Hospitality
The room key card, the menu, the welcome card. Concierge stories, neighborhood guides, breakfast menus — change them in real time, no reprint.
Real estate
On the sign, on the door, in the listing. Floor plan, neighborhood, school district, video walkthrough — a brochure that never goes stale.
Events
Wedding favors, conference badges, festival wristbands. The shared moment as a living record — photos and video added live by everyone who was there.
Gifts
A simple card. A handwritten note that opens into a video and a photo montage. Sentiment that travels with the object, not just the moment of opening.
Art
On the back of the canvas, on the base of the sculpture, in the corner of the frame. Artist statement, process video, provenance, exhibition history.
Journals & keepsakes
A locket, a leather notebook, a small box of letters. The private memory anyone you choose to share with can scan into.