Photo Credits: JYP Entertainment + Cosmopolitan Korea + POSTES

For a generation used to seeing K‑pop idols as flawless avatars of trend, KickFlip’s April 2026 Cosmopolitan Korea digital cover with POSTES reads like a manifesto: this is not just a boy group wrapping an ad campaign; it’s a collective stepping into a fully owned identity. The seven JYP trainees who first united on LOUD in 2021 have sharpened into a group that moves between intimacy and grandeur as naturally as they flip between rap verse and melodic hook.
Staged inside the sleek, minimalist frame of Cosmopolitan Korea’s April 2026 issue, the pictorial with French‑inspired perfume brand POSTES feels like a cinematic opening sequence: skateboards, handwritten notes, perfume bottles glowing on desks, and the members sprawled across tiled floors in soft light. It’s fashion, fragrance, and fandom fused into one story about how modern K‑pop boys are learning to smell, feel, and dress like their own characters rather than somebody’s template.
From Survival Show to Signature Style
KickFlip’s origin on SBS’s LOUD, co‑produced by JYP Entertainment and P Nation, already set the tone: talent judged under pressure, sexes blended, aesthetics tested globally before the first stage. The process left seven members—Kyehoon, Amaru, Donghwa, Juwang, Minje, Keiju, and Donghyeon—less like a factory‑fresh product than a rough‑cut crew who’d seen each other’s nerves, doubts, and raw reactions.
Their January 2025 debut mini‑album Flip It, Kick It! and lead single “Mama Said” announced a group that flirts with edge, swagger, and just enough vulnerability to feel human.


But it’s in the 2026 season—the My First Kick era, the POSTES‑linked Cosmopolitan cover, and a growing international schedule—that their aesthetic fully crystallizes: denim, leather, oversized jackets, coordinated but not cloned outfits, and a refusal to stay in one box.
“We don’t want to look like we’re following a formula. We want the formula to follow us.”
Fashion here isn’t décor; it’s narrative. Kyehoon’s leather harness and silver chains carve a leader‑as‑rebel, while Juwang’s softly draped shirts and neat tailoring underline his role as the vocal anchor. Each member gets a “room” to inhabit: Keiju sprawled on a bed with a perfume bottle at his side, Donghwa caught mid‑skate on a brick wall, Minje writing at a desk so still it feels like a confession.
Cosmopolitan Korea: The Fashion Chapter
As Cosmopolitan Korea’s April 2026 digital cover, KickFlip break the mold of the “only‑for‑Magazine” idoldol. The cover image stacks the seven members across a set of stairs, bathed in a cool, almost daylight‑like glow, their outfits casual but intentional—denim, henleys, bombers, and layered basics that read equally like a street‑style shoot and a backstage warm‑up. It’s a visual promise that K‑pop doesn’t have to choose between glossy and real; it can feel like both at once.
“They’re not just selling a perfume. They’re selling a mood, a memory, a specific shade of ‘us at 3 a.m.’“


The underlying thread is “youth with intention.” The POSTES collaboration, which folds fragrance into the pictorial, treats scent as another costume: the perfume bottle, textured paper, and handwritten notes become props in a story about memory, first impressions, and the kind of mornings idols wake up in when they’re no longer just “new.” POSTES’ Manueller‑style bottles, with their artisanal look and Paris‑tinged branding, sit beside KickFlip’s casual chaos like a quiet reminder that growing up often smells like paper, ink, and something just a little expensive.
Visually, the editorial leans into motion and stillness: wide shots of the group on tiled floors, then sudden close‑ups of a single face, a hand touching a bottle, a leg mid‑kick. It’s a trick that mirrors their music—big chorus hooks followed by stripped‑down verses—and gives the issue a cinematic rhythm that reads beautifully on mobile screens.
The Music, the Moves, the Moment
KickFlip entered 2025 with the blunt, self‑aware energy of “Umm Great” and “Mama Said,” tracks that flirt with rebellion and self‑doubt, never quite deciding whether they’re mocking or embracing the roles they’re handed.
By 2026, the group’s My First Kick project and widening international promotions signal a shift from “new boy group” to “artists with a point of view.”
“KickFlip don’t chase trends—they treat fashion, fragrance, and fandom like parts of the same story.”


The Cosmopolitan shoot slots neatly into this evolution: the same members who once performed in matching competition uniforms are now choreographing their own image, collaborating with high‑end fragrance, and appearing in one of Korea’s most influential fashion‑lifestyle titles. Their stages, too, grow more layered—more talk breaks, more eye‑to‑camera intimacy, more moments where a member might pause, catch his breath, and look straight at the camera as if to say, “OK, this is me now.”
This blend of music and visual identity is what separates legacy acts from moment‑makers. KickFlip are still new, but their 2026 run—marked by POSTES, Cosmopolitan, and steadily expanding global tours—positions them as a group that treats every comeback, every cover, and every V‑live as a chance to redraw their silhouette.
Fan Culture and the Global Shift
Few groups in JYP’s current boy‑group pipeline have generated the cross‑national chemistry that KickFlip has.
Their fandom oscillates between Korea, Japan, the US, and Southeast Asia, with Japanese members like Keiju and Amaru supplying a natural bridge between Tokyo and Seoul.
When the Cosmopolitan Korea and POSTES pictorial drops, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok fill with GIFs of Kyehoon’s smirk, Donghwa’s skateboard moment, and that close‑up of Juwang’s fingers resting beside a perfume bottle.


The fan‑led hashtags that follow—vote campaigns, comeback countdowns, “we’re protecting KickFlip from overworking” threads—signal a new kind of fandom contract: less “I worship you” and more “I’m invested in your longevity.”
Their merchandise, limited‑edition POSTES‑linked collabs, and even unofficial “KickFlip uniforms” (denim jackets, chunky sneakers, skateboards) show a fandom that wants to live inside the same aesthetic world as the group.
This isn’t just about music charts; it’s about cultural infiltration. The Cosmopolitan cover and POSTES partnership make KickFlip feel adjacent to fashion‑week energy, editorial campaigns, and even indie‑film aesthetics, nudging K‑pop away from pure idol‑industry spectacle and closer to a broader youth‑culture movement.
The Production Team
Digital Editor 송운하
Photographer 양중산
Film 홍지은
Hair 정미영, 심휘원 by 알루
Makeup 최고운, 김지은, 박서원 by 알루
Stylist 이서영
Set Stylist 전수인
Assistant 임정현
Art designer 장석영
Cooperation @postes_official
Digital Editor Song Unha
Photographer Yang Jung‑san
Film Hong Ji‑eun
Hair Jung Mi‑young, Sim Hwi‑won by Allu
Makeup Choi Ko‑woon, Kim Ji‑eun, Park Seo‑won by Allu
Stylist Lee Seo‑young
Set Stylist Jeon Su‑in
Assistant Lim Jeong‑hyun
Art designer Jang Seok‑young
Cooperation @postes_official


