Lady Eliza Spencer, niece of Diana, Princess of Wales, has entered the fiercely competitive drinks trade with Lala V Rosé, a Provençal wine launched exclusively at Hackstons’ flagship store in Knightsbridge. For premium brand builders, the launch is a textbook exercise in scarcity.
Rather than chasing supermarket listings or a splashy nationwide rollout, Lady Spencer has tied her debut wine to a single retail partner. Hackstons, the luxury drinks retailer and whisky cask specialist, will be the only place to buy it.
Speaking at the launch, Lady Spencer said: “I’m so excited to see Lala V stocked exclusively at Hackstons. It means so much to partner with a destination that shares our passion for quality, craftsmanship and creating memorable experiences. I can’t wait for people to discover and enjoy Lala V there.”
Hackstons founder Alphie Valentine said: “Lady Eliza has created a truly exceptional rosé that perfectly reflects the elegance and quality both our brands represent. We’re delighted to exclusively launch Lala V at Hackstons and look forward to introducing our customers to a wine that celebrates the very best of Provence, craftsmanship and modern luxury.”
The playbook will be familiar to anyone who has studied the luxury business model and how high-end brands are built: restrict supply, anchor the product to a story, and let exclusivity do the marketing. The name itself is the story here, combining Lala, Lady Eliza’s childhood nickname, with Vie, the French word for life.
The wine is pale pink with salmon-hued reflections, opening with aromas of ripe peach and subtle citrus and finishing, in the brand’s words, with a refined softness that lingers elegantly. It is pitched at both intimate occasions and grand celebrations.
There is a commercial logic beyond romance. Wine remains serious money in Britain, with duty on wine, other fermented products and cider delivering some £4.9 billion to the Treasury in the last financial year, according to HMRC’s Alcohol Bulletin. Capturing the premium end of that market, where margins survive, is precisely where a famous name and a single prestigious stockist earn their keep.
The launch also lands in a drinks sector busy reinventing how brands come to market. While James Watt is attempting a community-funded brewing comeback built on canned beer and crowd loyalty, Lala V is going the other way: one wine, one store, one postcode.
That postcode carries its own lessons. Knightsbridge has had a bruising year at the top end, and the closure of Harrods Estates after 130 years showed that a storied name alone no longer guarantees custom. There is a wry footnote for Spencer watchers: Countess Raine Spencer, Diana’s stepmother, once served as a director of that very agency.
Lala V is hedging accordingly. Alongside the Knightsbridge exclusive, customers can join a mailing list offering priority access to new vintage releases, limited allocations and invitations to private events, a direct-to-consumer funnel that keeps the brand in control of its own demand.
For SME founders, the lesson is worth bottling. You do not need to be everywhere at launch. Sometimes the smartest route to market is the narrowest one.













