Standing approximately 8.5 cm tall, Heliotrope 2 was produced in this single, intimate size, suggesting it was conceived as a personal, elegant object—something designed to sit comfortably on a vanity rather than to dominate it. The frosted cone is not merely decorative: it introduces a tactile contrast to the smooth clarity of the bottle’s body, and it transforms the flacon into a miniature sculpture, poised between the organic and the geometric. This duality likely appealed to Coty, who prized bottles that doubled as objets d’art.
Although the design is widely believed to be the work of RenĂ© Lalique, no examples have surfaced with confirmed Lalique signatures. Instead, these bottles appear signed for Coty alone. This has led to a well-supported conclusion: Lalique likely produced the original design concept and possibly early prototypes, but the bottle was never adopted into his own production line. By the 1920s, when Coty had established his own glassworks and was increasingly replicating or reinterpreting Lalique’s earlier designs for in-house manufacture, the Heliotrope 2 bottle seems to have moved forward independently under Coty’s control. The absence of Lalique signatures, combined with the existence of Coty-signed examples, supports the idea that what began as a collaborative design ultimately became a Coty-produced flacon.
Used for several Coty fragrances—including Peau d’Espagne and Jasmin de Corse—the bottle’s serene shape and frosted stopper suited a range of olfactory moods. Whether holding a deep, smoldering leather-amber or a bright Mediterranean floral, it offered a refined, neutral stage upon which each perfume could shine. In the context of Coty’s broader bottle history, Heliotrope 2 stands as an intriguing transitional piece: born from Lalique’s aesthetic vocabulary, but finalized and realized by Coty himself, embodying the evolving relationship between perfumer and glassmaker during one of the most influential periods in perfume bottle design.

