The Story
Why it exists.
Pacific Chill arrived in 2023 as a collaboration between Jacques Cavallier-Belletrud and artist Alex Israel, part of Louis Vuitton's Parfums de Cologne collection. The brief was simple: bottle the feeling of California's coast. Not the postcard version, the real one. Palm trees against a fading orange sky. Ocean air that cools as the sun drops. The moment when everything slows down because you finally got somewhere worth being. Cavallier-Belletrud built the composition around that specific exhale, the relief of arrival.
If this were a song
Community picks
Space Song
Beach House
The Beginning
Pacific Chill arrived in 2023 as a collaboration between Jacques Cavallier-Belletrud and artist Alex Israel, part of Louis Vuitton's Parfums de Cologne collection. The brief was simple: bottle the feeling of California's coast. Not the postcard version, the real one. Palm trees against a fading orange sky. Ocean air that cools as the sun drops. The moment when everything slows down because you finally got somewhere worth being. Cavallier-Belletrud built the composition around that specific exhale, the relief of arrival.
What makes Pacific Chill work is the tension between cool and warm. The mint and citrus opening reads as immediate, almost medicinal in its freshness. But as the top notes lift, apricot takes over the heart, soft, almost overripe, sweet without apology. Coriander and basil anchor this transition, adding an herbal complexity that prevents the whole thing from reading as a body spray. The carrot seed note is the quiet surprise here: earthy, slightly bitter, it stops the sweetness from cloying. Fig and dates in the base give Pacific Chill its Mediterranean character, warm, slightly syrupy, the olfactory equivalent of dried fruit at a market stall.
The Evolution
The opening is all citrus and mint, a sharp, cold wave that hits immediately. Lemon, orange, and blackcurrant compete for attention while coriander adds a faint spice and mint delivers its mentholated chill. Within minutes, the apricot blooms. The sweetness doesn't compete, it softens everything. Basil arrives in the heart alongside carrot seeds, adding a green, almost vegetable note that keeps things grounded. The rose is barely there; a whisper of florals that could be missed entirely. The drydown belongs to fig and dates. Warm. Settled. The citrus has faded, the mint long gone, and what's left is a sweet, soft base that lingers on skin for hours and on fabric overnight. Ambrette gives it staying power without heaviness, this is a cologne that knows when to leave a room.
Cultural Impact
Pacific Chill taps into the wellness fragrance trend, scents designed to feel refreshing, almost detoxifying, rather than intoxicating. It arrives at a moment when consumers increasingly seek fragrances that smell like self-care: mint, citrus, green herbs, and fruit over amber, oud, or heavy florals. Louis Vuitton's positioning as a luxury object, the refillable bottle, the Marc Newson design, the Grasse sourcing, gives it an entry point into a category where most options are either niche独立性 or mainstream refreshers. The collaboration with Alex Israel brought a visual artist into the creative process, signaling that Pacific Chill is meant to be part of a lifestyle, not just a fragrance wardrobe.
The House
France · Est. 1854
When Louis Vuitton re-entered fragrance in 2016 after a seven-decade hiatus, it did so with Jacques Cavallier Belletrud as master perfumer and the resources of LVMH behind it. The collection draws from rare ingredients sourced through the group's vertical supply chain — Grasse jasmine, Chinese osmanthus, Middle Eastern oud. Each fragrance is a luxury object designed to sit alongside the house's trunks and leather goods.
If this were a song
Community picks
Pacific Chill sounds like golden hour on a California coast, warm, unhurried, with a cool undertone that arrives just as you think you've peaked. The curation leans into dreamy indie, sun-bleached guitars, and vocals that float above the mix the way apricot floats above the mint. Think: open windows, salt air, a road that doesn't end.
Space Song
Beach House





























