In Jackson's book, she said knowing your season and wearing the colors within it can help you look better, shop easier, and feel more excited about your appearance. She said wearing the right colors for her season gave her a ton of confidence.

In another attempt to find my season, I turned to the test on Jackson's site. But my results were inconclusive and I wasn't sure about the methodology. I also don't think it would be useful for people of color to only see examples of white women.


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The first question asked of me was which "colors you get the most compliments on when you wear them." But this was tricky: How could I be complimented on colors I never wear? Obviously, I'd mostly be complimented on wearing black if I usually wear black. So I ended up choosing winter colors, like emerald and black.

The book also didn't provide many tips or examples for people with darker skin. There are other, better resources, like the videos from Cocoa Styling on YouTube, where stylists thoroughly break down how individuals with darker skin can best discover their season.

To try to figure out your season at home, Dina said you should buy or borrow shirts in a few different colors and undertones to battle them out. For example, olive green (warm) vs. emerald green (cool) or pastel pink (cool) vs. coral pink (warm).

Since there are no warm versions of fuchsia or cool versions of orange, those are two of the best colors to try on. If orange gives you a glow, you're likely warm-toned. If fuchsia makes you shine, you're likely cool-toned.

Finding flattering colors is especially important when shopping for hats or scarves; colors become more important as they move closer to your face. Think about it; practically everyone can wear a nude shoe and still feel amazing, but the same cannot be said for a nude dress. This is because the dress is closer to your facial features. In terms of clothing, headwear is about as close as you can come to the face. This may seem daunting, but don't worry. Finding colors is much easier than it seems. We'll help you figure out which colors will keep you looking fabulous, fearless and flawless. How? By finding your color season. Color seasons are basically sets of colors that are specifically curated for an individual based on her features. Let's get started.

To determine your color season, first you need to determine if your features have warm or cool undertones. The features we're considering are eyes, hair, and skin. If you have already lost your hair, don't worry; simply use your natural hair color or your preferred wig color to complete the following steps.

ATTENTION REDHEADS! You might be an exception to the rules; even if you have cool skin, you may still fit into the warm family because red hair is an overwhelmingly warm feature. Check colors from the palettes below for warm spring and warm autumn color seasons and compare them to the color palette of the season you were placed in by the chart.

As you may have noticed in the chart, there are six color season families: The Warm Family, The Cool Family, The Clear Family, The Deep Family, The Soft Family, and The Light Family. Each family consists of two sisters. Just like real life sisters, the season sisters share clothes. For example, if you are a Warm Autumn, you are in the Warm Family and your sister season is Warm Spring; while the Warm Autumn color palette contains your main colors, you can also wear some colors from the Warm Spring palette. Experiment with colors from both palettes to decide which look best on you.

Each seasonal color palette mimics the color aspects of an individual falling into that color season. What does that mean? You have a natural color palette, which is manifested in your skin, eyes and hair. The aim of seasonal color analysis is to identify this natural color palette and to match it to one of the twelve color seasons.


We do this by evaluating your natural coloring along three color dimensions:

To sum up, what we are going to do is twofold:


(1) Identify the color settings of your natural coloring


(2) Match these settings to a color season with similar settings


This color season will contain those kinds of colors which are most similar to your own coloring and will therefore harmonise with you.

In other words, this aspect of your coloring determines whether you look better in warm, neutral or cool colors. And that will depend on whether your features have warm (yellow) undertones, cool (blue) undertones, or neutral (red) undertones.

You may have thought that you were warm because of the yellowness in your skin only to find out that warm colors make you look even more yellow. But with skin, what you see is not always what you get. And that is due to skin undertones.

The undertone of your skin sits somewhere on the hue scale. Warm undertones are yellow, cool ones are blue and neutral ones are red. Although green is also a neutral color, it is not one of the three primary colors. And no one has a green undertone - not to be confused with olive skin.

In general, hair with warm undertones tends to appear as bright golden hues (even on darker hair), whereas ashy hair indicates cool undertones. The two extreme hair colors black and platinum blonde are typically cool.

Hand in hand with value goes the concept of contrast. Generally, contrast is the level of difference in value between two or more colors. For instance, black and white are highly contrasted because their values are as different as can be. Two medium greys, on the other hand, have low contrast because their values are very similar.

Another way to look at contrast is by seeing how far apart two colors are on the color wheel. Two hues which sit on opposite sides of the color wheel will have very high contrast. For example, yellow and purple are opposites, and as such, they are highly contrasted. And that is because yellow is light, but purple has a dark value.

The more grey is added to a pure color, the more muted it becomes. Muted colors are therefore desaturated, greyed out colors, which are much less intense than their pure counterparts. They are also called tones. So a hot pink would be a pure color because it is fully saturated and vibrant. But a dusky rose would be a tone because it is soft.

In other words, this aspect of your coloring determines whether you look better in highly saturated, medium-saturated or desaturated colors. And that will depend on the amount of grey pigments present in your natural coloring.

Individuals with high chroma cannot wear grey (or other fashion neutrals) on its own without becoming dulled and washed out. But they are able to wear highly saturated colors without disappearing behind them.

Individuals with low chroma can wear grey (and other fashion neutrals) on its own without being washed out. To muted appearances, such understated colors add a graceful elegance. But individuals with low chroma are unable to wear highly saturated colors without being swallowed up by them.

You should now have discovered your settings on the three color dimensions. Remember, one of the three dimensions will house your primary color aspect - the most important aspect of your natural coloring. This aspect will be paired with your secondary color aspect to form your color season. Let's go through each possible combination one by one.

A warm primary aspect can be paired with bright (True Spring) or muted (True Autumn) as secondary aspect. Both True Spring and True Autumn look off in silver and cool colors. But True Spring needs saturated, fresh colors with higher chroma to truly shine, whereas True Autumn looks amazing in rich, earthy colors which are more muted. Notice how Jessica's features are more contrasted, whereas Chrissy's blend more.

A cool primary aspect can be paired with muted (True Summer) or bright (True Winter) as secondary aspect. These two color seasons are both cool and look off in gold and other warm colors. But True Winter is more contrasted and intense than True Summer and requires colors with higher chroma. The latter is overwhelmed by the saturated colors of Winter and needs a gentler coolness with lower chroma.

Your primary color aspect is light if the first thing that strikes you about your appearance is the absence of depth in your features.


Contrast: The contrast between your skin, hair, and eye colors is low - meaning that all features are similarly light.


Eyes: Light to medium blue or green and light hazel or light brown.


Hair: Very light - Light to medium ash or golden blonde, or soft/light auburn, or light to medium brown.


Main aspect: The lightness of the features' coloring (not to be confused with muted coloring: it's not greyed out but much more lively) and the lack of depth in the features.


Deciding factor: Very dark colors age you, but light, colorful tints make your appearance pop. Note that light colors in this analysis are not to be confused with muted colors, which are greyish. Those will make you look washed out.

The primary aspect light can be paired with warm (Light Spring) and cool (Light Summer). The two light seasons can be quite tricky to tell apart at first glance. Both are instantly aged if they put on anything that's dark. But they are easy to spot once they are dressed in either Spring or Summer colors.

Your primary color aspect is dark if the first thing that strikes you about your appearance is the depth of your features. This aspect can either mean that all of your features are dark or your hair and eyes are dark compared to your light skin.


Contrast: The contrast between your skin, hair, and eye colors is high. Your dark hair and eyes stand in contrast to a lighter skin tone, or the whites of the eyes and teeth stand in contrast to dark skin, hair and eyes.


Eyes: Black, black-brown, red-brown, brown. If you have an eye color other than the ones stated, you are not dark.


Hair: Very dark - Black, black-brown, chestnut brown, dark auburn.


Main aspect: Overall dark features or prominent dark features in combination with a high contrast level.


Deciding factor: Very dark colors make your eyes and hair pop, and you can wear them comfortably without being overwhelmed. Light, colorful colors, on the other hand, pale and wash you out. ff782bc1db

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