The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
LP02 Peacock Feather arrived as the second character in Le Persona's theatrical lineup, developed by Frank Voelkl, Emilie Bevierre-Coppermann, and Alain Allione. The name carries ceremonial weight, the peacock's feather, iridescent and proud, worn as a mask. The fragrance's story takes shape around a beach festival: sunlit, effervescent, full of warm skin and salt air. Citrus sparkles against creamy coconut. Jasmine and white florals lift through the heat. It's a composition built for warmth, for movement, for the exhale after a long swim.
What makes LP02 stand apart is its commitment to coconut as a structural base rather than a novelty note. Coconut creaminess anchors the entire composition, warm and enveloping, tropical without tipping into sunscreen territory. Paired with aromatic lavender and sweet white florals, the result occupies a space between beachy and sophisticated that feels genuinely unexpected in contemporary niche perfumery. The coconut doesn't compete with the florals. It cradles them, letting jasmine and lavender breathe while maintaining a creamy warmth that carries through the drydown.
The evolution
Citrus opens. Bergamot, lemon, lime, a terrace at golden hour. Bright, tart, immediate. Ten minutes in, the coconut peeks through, not as a surprise but as a promise. The citrus doesn't disappear. It softens, becomes the warmth beneath the florals. Jasmine arrives. Lavender follows. The composition breathes. Still warm. You catch it in the crook of your wrist. Hours later, coconut and amber hold the line. A skin scent now, but persistent. The kind that fades into something you'll recognize tomorrow on your sleeve.
Cultural impact
LP02 Peacock Feather arrives as the second character in Le Persona's theatrical collection. The peacock feather motif connects to a visual vocabulary familiar from K-pop and drama aesthetics, resonating with audiences drawn to Korean beauty branding. As K-beauty expanded beyond skincare into fragrance as a lifestyle category, this scent entered a cultural moment where Korean aesthetics had gained broad recognition. The feathered imagery carries associations with beauty and watchfulness, grounding the fragrance in a symbolic tradition that feels both personal and universally appealing.



















