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Before you buy a new wardrobe, wedding clothes or other special occasion attire, it's best to know how to choose colors that flatter your skin tone. Choosing the wrong color can make your skin and hair appear dull, while the right colors for your skin tone can make you look vibrant. This article will help you determine your skin tone, then how to choose clothes, jewelry, makeup, and hair color that will make your complexion look bright and vibrant.

How to Know What Colors Look Good On You

Color analysis expert Lindsey Myers suggests taking makeup-free selfies in natural light, with different-colored clothing items draped over your shoulders. Send the photos separately to three friends and ask which are the best and worst colors on you. See if there’s a consensus. Don’t forget to trust your instincts, too.

Part 1
Part 1 of 2:

Determining Your Skin Tone

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  1. Understand what skin tone is. Although individuals’ coloration span a very wide range of tones, there are only two basic types of skin tone: warm and cool.[1] Warm complexions have yellow undertones, whereas cool complexions have pink undertones. Though your skin may grow lighter or darker depending on how tan you are (whether from purposeful tanning or just from seasonal sun exposure), your skin tone will remain constant.
  2. [2] The skin on your face often has reddish tones that might lead you to believe you’re cool-toned, but the red might be coming from hormones, if you’re a woman, or sun exposure. Because of this, you want to use the skin on your throat and chest for this tape, not on your face.
    • Hold a piece of clean white paper up to your throat and chest.
    • Look at what colors jump out of your skin when juxtaposed against the white piece of paper.
    • Blue and pink colors mean you have cool-toned skin.
    • Green and gold colors mean you have warm-toned skin.
    • The coloration for neutrals might fluctuate depending on the time of year and sun exposure.
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  3. Again, you don’t want to compare colors against your face tones, so don’t use earrings for the jewelry test. Instead, you want to use necklaces or bracelets to analyze your coloration. You need gold and silver jewelry for this test. Under good natural lighting, look at how your skin appears against each color of jewelry.
    • Which metal makes your skin look brighter and healthier?
    • If you prefer gold against your skin, you are warm-toned.
    • If you prefer silver against your skin, you are cool-toned.
  4. People with cool-toned skin tend to get sunburn more easily, whereas people with warm-toned skin tend to tan, rather than burn.
    • Don’t overexpose yourself to the sun just to check whether your skin burns or tans!
    • Instead, rely on past experience. If you have painful memories of sunburn, you’re probably cool-toned. If you can’t recall ever getting sunburn, you’re probably warm-toned.
    • If you find that you neither burn nor tan, or that your burns quickly heal into a tan, you are probably neutral-toned.
  5. Determine your season. Though in the previous section, you determined whether you were cool or warm-toned, there are two further subdivisions within these two categories. Summer and winter are both cool tones, whereas spring and fall are both warm tones.
    • Summer: your skin has blue, red, or pink undertones during the white paper test; your hair and eye color contrasts gently against your skin color than winters.
    • Winter: your skin has blue, red, or pink undertones during the white paper test; your skin contrast sharply against your hair and eye color (pale skin and black hair, for example)
    • Spring: your skin has golden, cream, and peach undertones during the white paper test. Springs often have straw-colored or strawberry red hair, freckles, rosy cheeks, and blue or green eyes.
    • Autumn: your skin has golden, warm or yellow undertones during the white paper test.
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Choosing Colors That Works for Your Skin Tone

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  1. Some colors look good on everyone across the board, so people of all different skin tones should try to work bright red, pale pink, dark purple, and teal into their wardrobes.
  2. [3] Not all of your clothes have to match your skin tone perfectly because then you’d be wearing the same handful of colors over and over again. But you should make an attempt to maintain a steady rotation of colors that work well with your complexion, using other colors either as a pop or as a way to shake up your routine so your clothes don’t start looking monotonous.
  3. Wear jewelry that matches your skin tone.[7] Remember the jewelry test you did to determine whether you were cool or warm-toned? Now that you know which metals make your skin look healthiest and brightest, incorporate more of those metals into your jewelry collection.
    • Cool tones: summers should wear silver and white gold; winters should wear silver and platinum.
    • Warm tones: Springs should wear gold; autumns can wear gold, bronze, or copper.
  4. Wear makeup that works well with your skin tone.[8] You should always wear foundation and concealer that matches your skin tone as perfectly as possible. For under-eye concealer, you want to buy a product one shade lighter than your actual skin tone, to brighten up the dark under-eye area. Remember that your skin tone may change from winter to summer, based on sun exposure, so adjust your makeup throughout the year as necessary.
    • Very fair skin: if your skin can be described as “alabaster” or “porcelain,” you’ll look great in soft pink, tawny and beige tones, but want to avoid orangey reds. Nude and peach lipsticks look great for a daily shade, but a bright red will stand out for a dramatic look.[9] Avoid gray-based makeup like pale, frosty eye-shadows, as they tend to wash out your natural coloring.
    • Medium-fair skin: wear makeup with yellow and pearlescent undertones, and gold flecks
    • Medium-dark skin: your skin can work well with a wide range of colors, bright and punchy to pastel and understated. Experiment and see what fits your personal preference.
    • Dark skin: wear rich, metallic hues like copper and bronze to highlight your natural tone. Bright berry tones on cheeks and lips can also pop really nicely. Avoid pale colors that look chalky, though.
  5. Adjust your hair color to bring out your complexion.[10] This is a drastic, longer-lasting change that just changing your clothes, jewelry, or makeup, so think long and hard about it before you dye your hair. That said, changing your hair color can go along way toward making your complexion look bright and fresh.
    • Warm-toned skin with yellow/gold undertones: choose deep brown shades like chestnut and mahogany; coppery reds work well as highlights.
    • Cool-toned skin with blue/red undertones: your skin will work well with contrast, so look for intense colors in brown, red, or blonde.
    • Ruddy, reddish complexion: beige, honey, and golden hues will even out a ruddy complexion.
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How Does Color Matching Work For Clothes?


Community Q&A

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  • Question
    I have brownish-black hair color, medium-fair skin tone and brown eyes. What should I wear?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    You can pull off a range of colors. You'll look stunning in deep blues, purples, and reds, but also experiment with paler shades like light pink and ivory.
  • Question
    I have blue eyes and veins, suggesting cool tones, but I also tan extremely easily and I've burned very few times. I have tan skin, blue eyes, and light brown hair, so what do I wear?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    I have extremely similar coloring, and I've always found that I look best in a pale blue. I imagine that would be true for you, too. With the conflicting blue veins vs. successful tanning, it might be possible that you have a neutral skin tone.
  • Question
    Which colors will flatter my medium-fair, warm-toned skin, dark brown straight hair and brown eyes?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Deep greens will look fabulous on you, as will grays. You should also try darker purples for a dressier look.
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Expert Interview

Thanks for reading our article! If you’d like to learn more about color analysis, check out our in-depth interview with Bethany Brenneman.

About This Article

Lindsey Myers
Co-authored by:
Color Analysis Expert
This article was co-authored by Lindsey Myers. Lindsey Myers is a color analysis expert based in New York City. She is the Founder and CEO of Created Colorful, a company that teaches their clients their best colors and helps them find themselves in their closets. Since founding the company in 2020, Lindsey and her team have helped over 20,000 clients discover their best colors. Their mission is to help their customers love the way they naturally look, and they provide thoughtful and intentional style guidance and color analysis for people of every shape, size, skin tone, and season of life. At Created Colorful, Lindsey manages a team of 25, and they offer a variety of services, including virtual color analysis, closet curation audio courses, facebook groups for clients of each palette, and weekly blogs with clothing and makeup recommendations by palette. This article has been viewed 1,560,199 times.
144 votes - 73%
Co-authors: 26
Updated: May 29, 2025
Views: 1,560,199
Article SummaryX

To choose colors that flatter your skin tone, determine whether you have cool or warm toned skin by looking at the veins on the inside of your wrist. Then, decide what season you are by holding a piece of white paper up to your skin and looking for its undertones. If your season is summer, meaning your skin has blue, red, or pink undertones and your hair and eyes softly contrast against your skin, wear pastel colors and soft neutral tones. If your skin is autumn, warm, deep colors like coffee and tomato red. For tips on matching your jewelry and makeup to your skin tone, read on!

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Reader Success Stories

  • Cassie Cline

    Cassie Cline

    Jul 27, 2017

    "I never paid attention to my skin tone being cool, warm, or natural. It was fun finding out while reading the skin..." more
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