Purple
Purple Indian peafowl are a domestic color variety in which the male's usual blue is shifted toward violet, plum, or wine-purple in strong light. The effect is most visible on mature cocks, especially across the neck, breast, and shoulder area; the train remains green-bronze but can carry a darker purple cast. Hens are generally brownish with subdued violet or green tones. Purple belongs to Indian peafowl, Pavo cristatus, and can be combined with barred-wing, black-shoulder, pied, silver pied, or white-eyed patterns.
Judging purple birds takes patience because juveniles and hens may not show the color clearly. Breeders normally plan pairings carefully, since white, pied, and related color lines can obscure what a bird carries genetically. For keepers, there is no special purple-specific care: provide a large secure pen or safe range, elevated roosts, shelter from wet weather, and a balanced gamebird-style diet. If a cock is being kept for display, space and low-stress handling help protect the long train through the breeding season.
Colors: Barred‑Wing, Black‑Shoulder, Pied, Silver Pied, White‑Eyed