This isn't a
template.
It's built. Real geometry, real light, real reflection — rendered live in your browser, right now, reacting to you. Scroll it. Touch it.
Scroll drives
the camera.
Nothing here is a video or a GIF. The camera is flying through a scene that's being drawn this second, reacting to exactly how far you've scrolled. It's the same technique behind the studio sites people pay $30,000 for.
Every key is
a real object.
Sixty-one individually built keycaps, each catching light on its own bevel. Move your cursor across them. Hover one — it knows. That's the difference between a picture of a thing and the thing itself.
People remember
what they touch.
Your competitors have a stock photo and a booking button. A visitor scrolls past and forgets it in four seconds. This is what makes someone stop, play with it, and remember your name — and it's what a Sailoh hero does with your brand instead of a keyboard.
Your hero, in your world.
Every one of these is live 3D running in your browser — not video. Same engine as the keyboard above, reskinned. That's the point: it becomes your brand, not a template someone else also has. Open one and play with it.
These three are concept demos with invented brand names — built to show range, not real clients.