Wondering what season you are? Upload a selfie and this free online color analysis reads your undertone, eye color, and natural contrast, then matches you to one of the four color seasons and shows which clothing colors and makeup shades suit you, with no sign-up required.
Get personalized makeup, skincare, and style recommendations built around your coloring and features.
Get Full Analysis — FreeGetting your colors done usually means one of two things: an in-person draping session, where a trained analyst holds fabric against your skin under controlled light, or a color analysis quiz that asks you to rate your own skin, eyes, and contrast in a mirror. Self-rating is where quizzes go wrong, because undertone is hard to see on yourself. This tool removes the judging step. You upload one photo, and a vision model reads the same signals an analyst would: the cast of your skin, your eye color, and how much contrast sits between your features.
The result names your season and undertone, reports a confidence score, and gives you a working palette with six colors to wear, three to skip, matching makeup families, and the jewelry metal that suits your skin. Use it as a starting point before you spend money on clothes that fight your coloring, or as a second opinion on a season you already suspect. Either way it costs nothing and takes about ten seconds.
Color analysis is the practice of matching the colors you wear to the coloring you were born with. An analyst looks at the undertone of your skin, the color of your eyes, and the depth of your natural hair color, then works out which shades make your face look brighter and which ones wash you out. The four-season system, popularized in the 1980s by the book Color Me Beautiful, groups people into Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter based on two axes: warm versus cool, and light versus deep.
Traditional seasonal color analysis happens in a studio, where the analyst holds colored drapes under your chin and watches how your skin responds to each one. A photo-based color analysis quiz applies the same logic to a selfie, reading the signals from your image instead of from fabric. The result tells you which palette to reach for before you buy anything.
The four seasons come from crossing two traits. Undertone decides whether you sit on the warm side or the cool side, and depth decides whether your coloring reads light or deep. Each combination gets a season, and each season carries a palette of shades that repeat its own qualities.
Spring coloring is warm and light. The skin carries a golden or peachy cast, the eyes are often blue, green, or light hazel, and the contrast between features stays gentle. Spring palettes run on clear, sunny shades such as warm coral, peach, golden yellow, aqua, and ivory. Dusty or muted colors tend to flatten this coloring rather than lift it.
Summer coloring is cool and light. The skin shows a pink or rosy undertone, and the features blend softly into one another. The palette favors powdery, blue-based shades such as lavender, powder blue, soft rose, dove gray, and cool taupe. Stark black and warm orange overpower Summer coloring, while gentle mid-tones let it come forward.
Autumn coloring is warm and deep. The skin glows golden or bronze, the eyes lean brown, amber, or warm green, and the overall effect is rich rather than delicate. Autumn palettes echo late-season foliage with rust, olive, camel, mustard, and warm chocolate brown. Icy pastels clash with this warmth, and earthy shades settle against it naturally.
Winter coloring is cool and deep, and it carries the strongest contrast of the four seasons. The undertone runs pink or blue, and the features stand out sharply from one another. Winters wear saturated, blue-based color well, including true red, emerald, royal blue, icy pink, and pure white. Beige, orange, and muted earth tones drain this coloring instead of sharpening it.
If you are asking whether you are warm or cool toned, three quick checks at home will get you most of the way there. Start with the vein test: look at the veins on the inside of your wrist in daylight. Veins that look green point to a warm undertone, blue or purple veins point cool, and a mix of both suggests neutral. The jewelry test comes next. Hold gold and silver pieces against your bare forearm and note which one blends with your skin rather than sitting on top of it; gold flatters warm undertones and silver flatters cool ones.
Finally, try the white-versus-cream test. Hold a pure white cloth under your chin, then swap it for cream or off-white. Warm undertones look healthier against cream, while cool undertones brighten next to pure white. If the three tests disagree, which happens often with neutral coloring, a photo analysis makes a good tiebreaker.