Senior bartenders, pressure-tested
Uniformed bar team chosen from the same pool that runs F1 suites and Aston Martin London — composed, camera-ready, and consistent across a three-hour window as the room fills.
A bar service designed around watchmaking's own virtues — precision, detail, and quiet theatre — delivered intimately for fifty guests at the watch house on King Street.
A watchmaking moment deserves a bar team that operates by the same principles — precision under pressure, detail-led execution, and the confidence to make service feel intentional rather than performed. Mr Flavour sits inside luxury environments as an extension of the brand, not a catering layer on top of one.
Uniformed bar team chosen from the same pool that runs F1 suites and Aston Martin London — composed, camera-ready, and consistent across a three-hour window as the room fills.
Garnish, glassware, and serve design tuned for the same eye that reads a dial — details finished to the standard the brand will be judged on.
Staff who read the room, hold the service line, and let the watchmaking moment remain the main moment of the evening.
Proven across Aston Martin London, Abu Dhabi F1 hospitality, and private luxury occasions where the brand bar is scrutinised, not tolerated.
Six moments from recent luxury-sector service — Aston Martin bespoke menu design, brand-led signature serves, printed brand marks on the drink itself, trackside hospitality teams in uniform, and branded bar environments built around the client's world. Every menu is written against the client's brand, not pulled from a catalogue.
Two reels from the Mr Flavour archive — cocktail innovation and serve theatre at close range. Each film shows the same principle the watchmaking moment will rest on: considered, precise, and calmly delivered.
Cocktail innovation — ideas, creativity, and theatrical serves from the Mr Flavour bespoke development bench.
Cocktail theatre — craft, presentation, and serve design for premium occasions, calibrated and never loud.
Every pour is a considered act — colour, clarity, garnish, finish. For a watchmaker's audience, the serve itself becomes part of the brand's presentation.
Fifty guests. Three hours. One bar. The setup that lets every guest feel attended to without the service ever looking busy — two mixologists, a senior on site, and a waiter team moving quietly through the room.
The detail work a watch-literate crowd will register — because they see detail for a living.
Service posture calibrated for luxury environments — steady, clean, and quietly confident.
Theatrical serves for a luxury audience aren't loud — they're timed, controlled, and designed to match the room's pace. The guest leans in rather than looks up.
A selected moment of flame, a moment of dry ice — presented by the bar team, not performed at the guest. These are the serve details that give a luxury evening its own restrained theatre: chosen for the brand, finished by hand, and never overplayed.
Serves tuned to the brand's palette — a single signature colour run across the night, or a curated range for the key moment of the evening.
The brief flourish that reads like a reveal rather than a gimmick — a single, calibrated moment of theatre designed for the guest to lean in to, then step back from.