Pleats Please In Bloom Issey Miyake
Fragrance Story
Pleats Please in Bloom by Issey Miyake is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women. Pleats Please in Bloom was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Aurélien Guichard. Top notes are Raspberry and Litchi; middle notes are Rose and Peony; base notes are White Musk, Cedar and Patchouli.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Aurélien Guichard
Aurélien Guichard is a French perfumer and the creative director of Givaudan's prestigious Fragrance Division, known for his deep expertise in natural ingredients. His style balances modern minimalism with rich, textured accords, often highlighting woody, aromatic, or green notes with unexpected contrasts. He created the iconic Bond No 9 Chinatown, a bold floral gourmand, and the crisp, verdant Azzaro Aqua Verde, demonstrating his range from opulent to fresh. Guichard's work has helped define contemporary luxury perfumery through its refined yet accessible character.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Pleats Please In Bloom Issey Miyake
Essence
To wear Pleats Please In Bloom by Issey Miyake is to embrace a fragrance that is both structured and whimsical-a paradox of crisp pleats and soft florals, of discipline and spontaneity. The person who chooses this scent is drawn to the interplay of order and sensuality, embodying the Lover archetype in its most refined form. The Lover seeks beauty, connection, and harmony, but beneath the delicate surface lies a tension between devotion to aesthetic ideals and the fear of losing oneself in them.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is curated with precision-each object, each garment, each gesture is deliberate yet appears effortless. They favor minimalist silhouettes with unexpected textures, much like the fragrance itself: clean, almost architectural, yet softened by the warmth of peony and magnolia. Their home is a sanctuary of muted tones and organic shapes, where every vase, book, or cushion has been chosen not for trend but for its ability to evoke quiet pleasure.
They move through life with a dancer’s awareness of space, their presence neither loud nor timid, but assured. Their style is not ostentatious, yet it lingers in memory-a whisper of something carefully considered, something that refuses to be forgotten.
Their days are structured around rituals-morning tea in a hand-thrown ceramic cup, evening walks through quiet streets, the deliberate selection of a scent that matches their mood. They are drawn to careers that allow for creativity within boundaries: design, curation, writing, or any discipline where form and feeling intersect.
They are not workaholics, nor are they idle dreamers. They understand the necessity of labor but refuse to let it consume their spirit. They work to live, not live to work, yet they take quiet pride in the precision of their craft.
Philosophy & Values
For them, beauty is not mere vanity but a form of truth. They believe that how one presents oneself to the world is an act of respect-for others and for oneself. Their philosophy is not one of rigid perfectionism, but of balance: the recognition that discipline and indulgence must coexist. They are drawn to the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi, finding grace in imperfection, yet they also harbor a quiet resistance to chaos, fearing that without structure, beauty dissolves into formlessness.
They value relationships that are deep but not consuming, connections that allow for both intimacy and independence. Their friendships are built on mutual appreciation-of art, of thought, of shared silences. They are not the type to lose themselves in passion, but rather to refine it, to hold it at just the right distance so that it neither burns nor fades.
Relationships
In love, they are both tender and elusive. They give freely, but never recklessly. Their affection is measured, not out of coldness, but out of a fear of surrendering too much-of becoming lost in another. They seek partners who understand the sacredness of personal space, who appreciate subtlety over grand gestures.
Yet this restraint can become their shadow. Their devotion to balance sometimes tips into emotional withholding, a reluctance to fully immerse in the messiness of human connection. They may be accused of being too composed, too careful, as if they are afraid to let life crease their perfectly pleated existence.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength-their devotion to beauty and balance-can also be their prison. In their quest to avoid excess, they may deny themselves the raw, unfiltered experiences that give life its depth. Their fear of disorder can make them rigid, their appreciation of subtlety can render them indecisive, and their love of control can stifle spontaneity.
At their worst, they become a curator of life rather than a participant, admiring emotions from a distance rather than surrendering to them. They may mistake restraint for wisdom, forgetting that sometimes, the most profound beauty lies in surrender-in allowing the pleats to crumple, the scent to fade, the heart to be unguarded.
Conclusion
The lover of Pleats Please In Bloom is neither a hedonist nor an ascetic, but a seeker of the middle path-where elegance meets emotion, where discipline does not suffocate desire. They are a living testament to the belief that life, like fragrance, should be layered, nuanced, and impossible to reduce to a single note.
Yet the question lingers: Can one truly know beauty without first embracing chaos? The answer, perhaps, lies not in the scent itself, but in the moment they finally allow it to fade.