US Trends

what colour suits my skin tone

Here’s a simple, no-nonsense guide to “what colour suits my skin tone” that you can actually use next time you get dressed.

Step 1: Work out your undertone

You don’t need anything fancy, just daylight and a mirror.

1. The vein test

  • Look at the veins on your wrist in natural light.
  • Mostly blue / purple → you’re likely cool toned.
  • Mostly greenish → you’re likely warm toned.
  • Can’t really tell / mix of both → you’re probably neutral.

2. The jewellery test

  • Gold jewellery looks better on you → usually warm.
  • Silver / platinum looks better → usually cool.
  • Both look equally good → often neutral.

3. The white‑T‑shirt test

  • In a plain white top or towel in daylight:
    • If your skin looks rosy, pink, or slightly bluish → cool.
    • If it looks golden, peachy, or olive → warm.
    • If it just looks “like you” without strong yellow or pink → neutral.

You can mix clues: if two of these point the same way, that’s probably your undertone.

Step 2: If you’re warm‑toned

Warm undertones have a golden, peachy, or olive cast. You’ll glow in colours that share that warmth.

Best clothing colours

  • Earthy tones: camel, caramel, terracotta, rust, warm browns.
  • Warm reds and oranges: tomato red, coral, brick red, burnt orange.
  • Warm yellows: mustard, marigold, golden yellow.
  • Warm greens: olive, moss, khaki, warm jade.
  • Soft pastels with warmth: peach, apricot, warm beige.

Best neutrals

  • Cream or ivory (not stark white).
  • Warm beige, camel, coffee, chocolate brown.

Colours that are trickier

  • Very cool icy pastels (ice blue, icy lilac) can make you look dull.
  • Super cold bluish greys or stark, clinical white are often harsh.

Mini example: If you’re warm and medium‑tan, a rust t‑shirt + cream jeans will usually look softer and more expensive on you than a bright fuchsia + icy white combo.

Step 3: If you’re cool‑toned

Cool undertones lean pink, red, or bluish rather than golden. Jewel tones are your power move.

Best clothing colours

  • Jewel tones: sapphire blue, emerald, amethyst purple, ruby.
  • Cool blues: cobalt, navy, royal blue, icy blue.
  • Cool pinks: rose, raspberry, fuchsia, blue‑based pink.
  • Blue‑based reds: cherry red, true red, wine.
  • Lavender, lilac, soft cool mauve.

Best neutrals

  • Crisp white rather than cream.
  • Charcoal, cool grey, navy, black.

Colours that are trickier

  • Very warm or mustard yellows can look muddy.
  • Orange‑heavy corals or rust can fight with your natural coolness.

Mini example: A cool‑toned person in a cobalt top and crisp white trousers will usually look fresher than in mustard yellow and camel.

Step 4: If you’re neutral‑toned

Neutral undertones can wear a wide range of colours, especially soft or “in‑between” shades, not too icy and not too neon.

Best clothing colours

  • Soft medium shades: dusty rose, muted jade, lagoon blue, medium green.
  • Gentle peaches and soft corals (not too bright).
  • Balanced blues and greens: teal, turquoise, medium blue.

Best neutrals

  • Off‑white, stone, taupe, medium grey.
  • Black and coffee brown can also work, especially if softened with a colour near your face.

Colours that are trickier

  • Extremely bright neons or very stark black‑and‑white on their own can overwhelm.

Mini example: A neutral undertone often looks great in a soft teal shirt and stone trousers because both sit in the “middle” of warm vs cool.

Quick HTML table: undertone vs colours

[1][3] [1][3] [3] [1][3] [3] [3] [3] [3] [3]
Undertone Best colours Best neutrals Use with caution
Warm Rust, coral, mustard, warm green, peach, caramel, warm red Cream, ivory, beige, camel, coffee, chocolate brown Icy blue, icy lilac, stark white, cold grey
Cool Sapphire, emerald, cobalt, raspberry, fuchsia, lavender, blue-red Crisp white, navy, charcoal, cool grey, black Mustard, rust, orange-heavy coral, very golden beige
Neutral Dusty pink, medium green, jade, light peach, lagoon blue, teal Off-white, stone, medium grey, black, coffee Very neon shades, harsh black-and-white combos

Seasonal colour idea (optional but fun)

Style communities in 2025–2026 love the old “seasonal” language (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter) combined with modern capsule wardrobes.

  • Springs: Warm and light → peach, coral, light warm yellow, fresh green.
  • Summers: Cool and soft → dusty rose, soft blue, lavender, raspberry.
  • Autumns: Warm and rich → rust, olive, mustard, deep teal, chocolate.
  • Winters: Cool and high‑contrast → black, white, jewel tones, icy brights.

You don’t have to fit perfectly in a “season”; use it like a mood board, not a strict rulebook.

How to test colours at home

You don’t need to buy a new wardrobe to figure this out.

  • Hold clothes up under your face in daylight and see: does your skin look smoother and more even, or more red/ashy?
  • Take a selfie in front of a window wearing different tops (white, black, warm, cool) and compare which makes your eyes and skin look more alive.
  • When you get lots of “You look well” comments, note what colour you’re wearing; that’s probably in your best range.

If you tell me more, I can be specific

If you’d like tailored suggestions, tell me:

  • Your undertone (or the results of the tests above)
  • Rough skin depth (very fair, fair, medium, tan, deep, very deep)
  • Hair colour and eye colour

Then I can give you a small, ready‑to‑use palette (tops, dress colours, even lipstick or hijab colours) that will likely suit your skin tone best.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.