Learning your home season is step number two in color analysis —
and it’s the most fundamental and non-negotiable step.
Yet I often hear this:
“I’m probably a Bright Spring, but I have a cool undertone.”
“I think I’m a muted Summer, but I lean warm.”
And this tells me one thing —
the process isn’t fully understood.
Guessing your season based on vibes, favorite colors, or palettes you like online doesn’t lead to clarity. It leads to confusion.
If your home season isn’t correctly identified, you will never reach your true sub-season or final palette.
Not now. Not later.
Each home season — Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter — has three very specific sub-seasons.
They don’t overlap. They don’t improvise.
There is no such thing as a Bright Summer.
Summer simply doesn’t have a bright sub-season.
So if you were given a sub-season without a clearly identified home season first, something was skipped — and that matters.
Color analysis is not about what someone “likes” on you.
It’s about which colors harmonized with your natural coloring and bring you out.
System: temperature, contrast and value — done in the correct order.
✨ 10% off is still going strong until January 1st
✨ Online color analysis + all digital guides are on sale
If you’re starting your color journey for the new year, start it properly — with a professional who knows the system and respects the process.
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While color analysis helps you find hues that truly complement your natural tones, many people confuse it with personal preference. From my experience, treating the process scientifically—focusing on temperature, contrast, and value—makes a big difference. Narrowing down your home season first is key because it determines the specific sub-season palettes you should explore. It’s also important to avoid mixing terminologies like "Bright Summer," which is not recognized in the traditional system. Identifying the correct category upfront leads to clarity rather than guesswork. This approach has helped me guide friends and clients smoothly through their style journeys. If you're considering digital color analysis, be sure it’s performed by professionals familiar with the full 16-season system and why each step matters. This ensures your palette is truly personalized, reflecting your natural undertones and contrast levels. Embracing this structured process opens doors to a wardrobe that feels authentic and flattering, making dressing daily both easier and more enjoyable.

























































































































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