Pleats Please L'eau Issey Miyake

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2013
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Pleats Please L'Eau by Issey Miyake is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women. Pleats Please L'Eau was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Aurélien Guichard. Top note is Wild Rose; middle notes are Neroli, Bulgarian Rose and Pink Pepper; base notes are White Musk, Cedar and Patchouli.

Composition Profile

rose 100%
woody 85%
musky 70%
citrus 60%
white floral 50%
floral 40%
powdery 35%
patchouli 30%
fresh 25%
soft spicy 20%

About the Perfumer

Aurélien Guichard

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

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Wild Rose Wild Rose

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Neroli Neroli
Bulgarian Rose Bulgarian Rose
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

White Musk White Musk
Cedar Cedar
Patchouli Patchouli
Unique Character

Pleats Please L'eau Issey Miyake by Issey Miyake offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Pleats Please L'eau Issey Miyake embodies the distinctive style of Issey Miyake while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Pleats Please L'eau Issey Miyake

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Aesthetic archetype-a seeker of beauty, harmony, and sensory refinement. They are drawn to the delicate balance of structure and fluidity in Pleats Please L'eau, a fragrance that mirrors their own essence: crisp yet soft, modern yet timeless. Like the scent itself-a blend of fresh florals, green notes, and a whisper of sweetness-they embody a paradox of precision and grace.

The Aesthetic does not merely consume beauty; they curate it, shaping their surroundings into an extension of their inner world. For them, life is an art form, and every choice-from the way they dress to the spaces they inhabit-is a deliberate brushstroke.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is an exercise in disciplined elegance. They favor clean lines, architectural silhouettes, and fabrics that drape rather than cling-pleated skirts, tailored trousers, oversized blazers that suggest both structure and ease. They avoid trends, opting instead for pieces that will endure, much like their fragrance, which is neither fleeting nor overpowering.

In art, they are drawn to minimalism and abstraction-Cy Twombly’s scribbled poetry, Agnes Martin’s quiet grids, the restrained chaos of Japanese calligraphy. Music, too, follows this pattern: Erik Satie’s Gymnopédies, the ambient hum of Brian Eno, the delicate tension of Arvo Pärt. They do not seek to be moved by force but by nuance.

Philosophy & Values

They move through the world with quiet intentionality, valuing simplicity that conceals depth. Their home is uncluttered but not sterile, filled with objects that serve both function and form-a hand-thrown ceramic vase, a single orchid in bloom, a well-worn book of poetry. They prefer muted tones-soft whites, pale grays, the faintest blush of pink-colors that do not shout but linger in memory.

Philosophically, they reject excess, seeing it as vulgar. Instead, they embrace wabi-sabi, the Japanese acceptance of imperfection and transience. They find beauty in the frayed edge of linen, the patina of aged brass, the way light shifts through sheer curtains. Their worldview is not one of rigid idealism but of subtle appreciation-they know perfection is an illusion, but harmony is attainable.

Relationships

They are selective in love and friendship, preferring depth over breadth. Their relationships are built on mutual appreciation for the unspoken-shared silences, knowing glances, the comfort of not having to explain oneself. They are not cold but reserved, revealing themselves in layers, like the unfolding notes of their perfume.

Romantically, they are drawn to those who possess their own quiet magnetism-people who understand that passion need not be loud to be felt. Their love is not possessive but reverent; they see their partner as both muse and equal. Yet, this very idealism can be their undoing-they may withdraw at the first sign of coarseness or imbalance, unwilling to compromise their standards.

Shadow

Beneath their composed exterior lies the Aesthetic’s shadow-the Perfectionist. When unbalanced, their pursuit of harmony becomes a tyranny of detail. They may grow impatient with mess, with disorder, with those who do not share their exacting tastes. Their disdain for the vulgar can curdle into elitism, a quiet arrogance that dismisses anything deemed "common."

They may also struggle with indecision, paralyzed by the fear of choosing wrongly-whether in love, career, or even something as trivial as a table setting. Their desire for the ideal can render them passive, waiting for life to arrange itself into the perfect composition rather than boldly shaping it.

Conclusion

Yet, at their best, they embody the very philosophy they admire-knowing that beauty is fleeting, that nothing lasts, and yet finding joy in the moment anyway. They are not naive; they understand that life is chaotic, that people are flawed, that even the most carefully curated existence will fray at the edges. But they persist, not in denial, but in defiance-creating pockets of grace in an imperfect world.

Pleats Please L'eau is their signature because it, too, is a paradox-light yet lasting, structured yet free. And so are they.