Color analysis test from a photo.

A good color analysis test is not a personality quiz. It should use visible evidence from your coloring and give you practical guidance you can apply to outfits, makeup, hair, glasses, hats, and accessories.

Photo checklist before you test

Use natural daylight, face the camera, and keep the lighting even. Pull hair away from your face if it blocks your skin, and avoid strong makeup if you want the most accurate color read.

If your photo has deep shadows, warm lamps, a filter, or a colored wall bouncing onto your skin, retake it. Small photo changes can move a borderline result.

  • Use a clear face photo in window light.
  • Skip filters, heavy makeup, sunglasses, and hats.
  • Wear a simple neutral top if possible.
  • Use a plain background without strong color cast.

What a color analysis result should include

The result should give more than a season name. Look for undertone, depth, chroma, contrast, a useful palette, colors to be careful with, and styling guidance that translates the read into real choices.

Paletta includes the likely season, alternate season context, a 24-color personal palette, colors to use carefully, and style boards for outfits, makeup, hair, glasses, hats, and accessories.

How to use the result after the test

Start with one or two near-face swaps. Try a top, scarf, lipstick, or glasses frame from your best colors and compare it with a color from your avoid list. You will learn faster from side-by-side use than from memorizing theory.

Keep the result flexible. Color analysis is guidance for making better choices, not a rulebook for throwing away everything you own.

Upload your photo and get a paid report with your season, 24-color palette, and style boards.

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