what colours suit my skin tone
You can figure out what colours suit your skin tone by first finding your undertone (warm, cool, or neutral), then choosing shades that mirror that undertone in your clothes, makeup, and accessories.
Quick Scoop
Think of this as a mini style consult: we’ll quickly pin down your undertone, match it to flattering colours, and give you some easy “try this today” ideas so you can see a difference right away.
Step 1: Find your undertone
Use these simple tests (you can do them in natural daylight with a mirror).
- Vein test
- Mostly green veins → you likely have a warm undertone.
- Mostly blue / purple veins → you likely have a cool undertone.
- A mix (hard to tell) → you may be neutral.
- Jewellery test
- Gold jewellery makes you look healthier and more “glowy” → probably warm.
- Silver or white gold looks more elegant and bright on you → likely cool.
- Both look fine → often neutral.
- T‑shirt test (white vs cream)
- Pure, crisp white makes you look bright, while cream makes you look dull → cool.
- Cream, ivory or off‑white looks softer and more flattering than bright white → warm.
- Both look OK, neither is clearly bad → neutral.
- Sun reaction test
- Tan easily, rarely burn → more often warm.
- Burn first, then (maybe) tan → more often cool.
- In‑between or depends → could be neutral.
You don’t need to “pass” every test the same way, but your answers will usually lean clearly toward one undertone.
Step 2: Colours for each undertone
If you’re WARM
Warm undertones look best in colours with a golden, earthy, or sunset feel.
- Great colours:
- Yellow, mustard, marigold
- Warm reds (tomato red, brick, rust)
- Orange, coral, peach
- Olive, moss, warm greens
- Turquoise with a hint of yellow, teal, sea green
- Warm browns (caramel, chestnut, chocolate)
- Warm berry, deep coral, terracotta.
- Neutrals that flatter:
- Cream, ivory, off‑white
- Camel, biscuit, taupe
- Coffee and chocolate brown.
- Colours to be careful with:
- Very icy pastels, stark cool greys, and electric blues can look harsh if they don’t have any warmth in them.
Example outfit : cream top, olive trousers, and a rust or terracotta bag will usually make warm skin look instantly more alive.
If you’re COOL
Cool undertones glow in colours that have a blue, pink, or jewel‑like edge.
- Great colours:
- Jewel tones: sapphire, emerald, amethyst, ruby
- Cool blues: navy, cobalt, ice blue
- Cool purples: violet, lilac
- Cool pinks: rose, raspberry, fuchsia
- Blue‑based reds (cherry, wine).
- Neutrals that flatter:
- Crisp white
- Charcoal and cool grey
- Navy and black.
- Colours to be careful with:
- Very yellow oranges, mustard, and some warm browns can make cool skin look sallow.
Example outfit : crisp white shirt, dark wash jeans, and a cobalt or emerald accessory is an easy cool‑undertone power combo.
If you’re NEUTRAL
Neutral undertones can wear a wide range of colours, but usually look best in medium, balanced shades (not super icy, not ultra‑neon).
- Great colours:
- Dusty rose, soft raspberry
- Jade, medium green, lagoon blue
- Light peach, muted coral
- Medium teal, denim blue.
- Neutrals that flatter:
- Off‑white and soft white
- Medium greys
- Black and coffee brown (often look chic).
- Colours to be careful with:
- Extremely bright neons or very icy pastels can overpower neutral skin more easily.
Example outfit : soft white tee, medium‑wash denim, and a dusty pink or jade jacket usually looks effortless on neutral undertones.
Seasonal “vibe” (optional, but fun)
Modern colour analysis often talks about you as a season : Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter.
- Spring: Light, warm, clear colours – think fresh greenery, peach, and bright turquoise.
- Summer: Cool, soft colours – lavender, rose, powder blue, soft navy.
- Autumn: Warm, deep, earthy colours – rust, mustard, forest green, deep teal.
- Winter: Cool, deep, high‑contrast colours – black, white, cobalt, true red, jewel tones.
These systems break down further (Light Summer, Deep Autumn, etc.), but you don’t need the full chart to start using the idea: match your overall contrast (dark hair vs light skin, etc.) and undertone to similar intensity in your clothes.
Quick reference table
| Undertone | Best colours | Best neutrals | Be careful with |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warm | Mustard, warm red, coral, olive, teal, caramel, chestnut | [1]Cream, ivory, camel, chocolate brown | [3][1]Icy pastels, very cool greys, electric blue without warmth | [8][1]
| Cool | Sapphire, emerald, cobalt, violet, raspberry, blue- red | [4][1]Crisp white, charcoal, navy, black | [3][1]Mustard, orange, some warm browns and yellow-greens | [8][1]
| Neutral | Dusty pink, jade, lagoon blue, light peach, muted teal | [8][1]Off-white, medium grey, black, coffee brown | [3][1]Very neon shades, extremely icy colours | [7][1]
How to test colours on yourself
You don’t need a professional session to see what works; use your mirror and daylight.
- Hold up different tops or scarves near your face (no makeup if possible).
- Watch for signs a colour is good:
- Your skin looks smoother and more even.
- Under‑eye circles and redness look softer.
- Your eyes look brighter; you don’t feel like you “need” makeup.
- Signs a colour isn’t helping:
- You instantly look tired or washed out.
- Shadows, redness, or fine lines look more obvious.
If you want a more tech‑y approach, some online tools let you upload a selfie and get a suggested palette, which can be a fun starting point (not a strict rulebook).
Wearing colours outside “your” palette
You never have to lock yourself in. If you love a colour that isn’t technically perfect for your tone, you can still make it work.
- Keep the “wrong” colour away from your face: wear it on trousers, shoes, bags, or skirts.
- Add a buffering colour that suits you near your face (like a scarf, jacket, or top).
- Use less‑flattering shades in prints instead of huge solid blocks, so they don’t dominate.
Mini TL;DR
- Find your undertone first (warm, cool, neutral) using veins, jewellery, and white‑vs‑cream tests.
- Pick colours that share your undertone: golden and earthy for warm, jewel and icy for cool, softened mid‑tones for neutral.
- Use natural daylight and your mirror to see what genuinely makes your face look fresher, then trust that more than any chart.
If you tell me your eye colour, hair colour, and whether you tan or burn, I can suggest a more tailored palette just for you.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.