@queen-of-oreo Second image of a "white peacock" is an AI slop. White peacocks do not have colored eye markings.
White peafowl are not misfortunes. They are a leucistic mutation that plenty of people breed on purpose. When enclosed in a pen where the hens cannot see other, colored males, they will breed just fine.
IMO, as a peafowl breeder, the whites are... okay. The males are pretty enough in the late spring and summer, but they drop that train in the fall, and spend the fall and winter looking like dirty chickens. And I do mean that literally, the white gets muddy from fall, winter, and early spring muck when the weather gets gross/wet.
A pristine snowfall looks great, until it turns into this
To answer your question, @type-blaze0, there are no breeds of peafowl. There are a few species, and there are color/pattern mutations, and leucistic mutations (like white), but there are no breeds.
Blackshoulder is a pattern mutation.
As for Andrealphus, given the amount of peacock-blue in the design, I would suggest a silver pied peacock, over a white.
They tend to keep some of the blue neck (often concentrated in the front or back), while largely having white coloring over the rest of them, with minimal colored spotting.
But peafowl come in a variety of colors and patterns, not just blue or white. Purple, jade, midnight, black, cameo, opal, bronze... just to name a few.
Whites are... okay. But while at times (like the summer) some may consider a white peacock more majestic than the classic blues, whites are, I'm afraid, a basic bitch mutation, that pales in comparison to some of the others