![]() I have light, rosy beige skin (with pink undertones and blue veins) and I do tan easily. I originally thought I was a Deep Winter, because I have naturally dark hair and eyes, with a high contrast between skin tone, eyes and hair color. I have taken many quizzes, yours too, yet I keep getting different results so it makes me uncertain… ![]() Hello, I’m having some trouble figuring out what winter type I am. from easily burns to tans gradually Deep: bronze, rich brown, mahogany, dark brown with golden, neutral or blue undertone ~ FS V-VI. tans easily, usually doesn't burn Deep: beige, ivory, olive, light brown with golden, neutral or rosy undertone ~ FS II-III. from burns easily to to tans gradually Clear: bronze, warm brown, cool brown with neutral or rosy undertone ~ FS IV-V. tans easily Clear: milky white, fair, porcelain, ivory with rosy, peachy or neutral undertone ~ FS I-III. from easily burns to tans gradually Cool: medium brown, olive, dark brown, black with grayish or blue undertone ~ FS IV-VI. rarely burns, tans easily Cool: porcelain, beige, fair with a rosy undertone ~ FS II-III. sometimes burns, tans gradually Soft: light brown, medium tan, caramel, olive with neutral undertone ~ FS IV-V. ![]() sometimes burns, tans gradually or easily Soft: neutral beige, ivory, may have freckles and neutral undertone ~ FS II-III. burns easily or usually, has difficulty tanning Warm: golden medium, caramel, light brown with golden undertone ~ FS III-IV. burns easily, doesn't tan Warm: golden ivory, fair or beige usually with freckles and peachy, golden undertone ~ FS. Your best Kettlewell colours: paprika, chilli, light sand, tan, chocolate, chestnut marl, russet, peacock, moss, turtle green, dark olive, old gold, ochre, yellow ochre.Light: fair or porcelain with a peachy or rosy undertone ~ FS I. Your best colours are rust red, mustard yellow, medium olive green and mid-browns and camels. Often a True Autumn will look like a 'typical' autumn, with reddish toned hair, light brown or green eyes and fair celtic skin that goes golden in summer. This is the season we think of as the 'typical' autumn colours - the ones you see on an autumn tree in leaf or the ready to harvest fields of corn and wheat. This week, we'll be looking at Autumn colours. If you fall at one end of, say, the Summer palette, it doesn't mean you can't ever wear colours from other areas of the palette you may have been given, just that this particular area is the very best part of the best palette for your personal skin tone and contrast level. Week three already! We've already explored the different types of Spring and Summer, so this week is Autumn's turn.Īs I always say, it's important to note that your seasonal type is a guide, not a rule book. ![]() When discussing each season I will try to use the most commonly understood terms of each type, but please do contact us if you feel we've and missed out a term that would help colour analysis clients understand their season. This is the third of four blog posts, exploring the different 'types' of each season.
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