We're live on Product Hunt!Support us
ColorArchive

A curated color library with 5,000+ algorithmically generated colors. Browse, search, save favorites, and export palette tokens — no account required.

CollectionsFamiliesNotesGuidesFree ResourcesConvertColorblindAboutSupportUpdates
Ready for static export
Privacy·Terms·Refunds·Cookies·Commerce Disclosure
colorarchive.org · © 2026 ColorArchive
Skip to content
ColorArchive
ProLog in
ArchiveAll ColorsCollections
Color Theory
Search intent: seasonal color analysis spring summer autumn winter palette

Seasonal Color Analysis Guide: Understanding Your Personal Color Season

The seasonal color analysis system classifies personal coloring into Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter types, each with a palette of flattering colors. This guide explains the system's logic, its real science, and its practical limitations.

Color AnalysisPersonal StylingColor TheoryFashion
Key points
The system works because colors interact with adjacent colors — your skin, hair, and eyes are always adjacent to your clothes, and undertone mismatch creates visible dissonance.
Warm seasons (Spring, Autumn) have yellow-orange undertones; cool seasons (Summer, Winter) have blue-violet undertones. This is the primary axis.
Spring and Summer are lighter/clearer; Autumn and Winter are deeper/richer. This is the secondary contrast axis.
The 4-season system is a simplification of continuous variation — 12 and 16-season extensions exist but are harder to self-diagnose reliably.

The Logic of the System

Seasonal color analysis is based on a real principle: colors interact with the colors adjacent to them, and your natural coloring — skin, hair, eyes — is always adjacent to your clothing. When a warm-undertoned person wears a cool-undertoned garment, the visual system detects an undertone conflict that reads as 'something's not quite right.' The seasonal system encodes undertone and intensity into four archetypes to make this principle navigable for non-specialists.

The Four Season Types

Spring (warm, light, clear): warm undertones, light hair, bright eyes — colors are warm, bright, and relatively light. Summer (cool, light, muted): cool undertones, light hair, soft features — colors are cool, soft, and low-saturation. Autumn (warm, deep, muted): warm undertones, darker hair, earthy features — colors are warm, rich, and complex. Winter (cool, deep, clear): cool undertones, high contrast between hair and skin — colors are cool, dark or vivid, and pure.

Finding Your Undertone

The primary diagnostic is undertone. Check the inside of your wrist in natural light: if the veins look green, your undertone is warm; if they look blue or purple, your undertone is cool. Check whether gold or silver jewelry looks better against your skin. Check whether ivory or bright white works better near your face. These tests are not infallible but are more reliable than attempting to classify hair or skin color directly, which is confounded by dye, tan, and subjective perception.

Using the System Practically

The practical application is not strict adherence to a season's prescribed palette — it is using the system to understand your undertone direction and contrast level. If you are warm, lean toward clothing with yellow-orange undertones in its neutrals and accents. If you have low contrast between your features, avoid strong contrast combinations (black and white) that will overwhelm your coloring. The system is a heuristic, not a prescription — your own testing with specific garments under specific conditions will always be more accurate than theoretical season assignment.

Open next
Browse Warm TonesBrowse Cool TonesBrowse Neutral Colors
Practical next step

Move from the guide into a concrete palette lane

Guides explain the use case. Collections prove the taste. Pro handles the export and implementation layer.

Upgrade to ProMore guides
Related guides
Dark Color Guide
Dark Color Palette Guide: Building Low-Luminance Palettes That Work
Dark palettes are harder to build well than light ones — contrast, hierarchy, and saturation all behave differently at low luminance. A practical guide to dark palette architecture for UI, branding, and editorial design.
Warm Color Guide
Warm Color Palette Guide: Reds, Oranges, Yellows, and Their Neutrals
Warm color palettes are the most emotionally immediate in design — and the most likely to go wrong. A designer's guide to building warm palettes that feel rich and intentional rather than aggressive or cheap.
Purple Color Guide
Purple Color Palette Guide: Violet, Lavender, Plum, and Beyond
Purple is the most complex hue family in design — spanning royal authority to digital tech, spiritual mystery to luxury beauty. A practical guide to using purple palettes effectively.