Would love to see a follow up video Hannah where you compare your existing wardrobe to the colour chart you’ve now got! Would be interesting to see it working in practice with actual clothes!
I like the little hints she gives - that you can choose the jewelery, or make up to make most of your skin, and then have a jacket, or a skirt in whatever colour you like. And that it's not so much about colours themself, but the shades. The RU-vidr called Justine has amazing videos about skin tones, and making capsule wardrobes in either cool, or warm, or very bright, fun colours with nice hints.
I also love the idea that everyone can wear every color so long as it's the right shade!! I now can't stop pulling things out of my closet, running around my house to try to find the best natural light, and holding things up to my face 😆 It turns out that I either have no items in a particular color (orange and yellow, because I was always told that I "couldn't" wear them) or 5 items in completely different shades (blue, red, and purple).
This reminds me so much of the scene in Bridget Jones' Diary when Bridget's mum says she should "get her colours done" and - having absolutely no idea what it meant - I eventually came to the conclusion that it meant getting her hair dyed 😂
@@morehannah I know! It all makes sense now. Also having now watched until the end - I would definitely be up for watching a clothes dying video if you attempt it :D
In the book she does end up letting her mum take her to have her colours done. While the colours are being held up to her face, Bridget and her mum have the most heart to heart conversation of all their interactions in the book. It's one of my favourite scenes
2 things I noticed: 1 - I think I'm the complete opposite colours to you. 2 - your colours very closely matched the ones that you picked for Rowan in the baby clothes rental video that you thought really suited him.
@@hannahk1306 I would love if she did Dan and Rowan's colors too, but I get she's not going to show Rowan's face on camera so that's out, and she could only do Dan if he wanted to, so ... but I am so curious if they're all springs or if there's a color mixture there. Like if Dan is cool, is that why she's having trouble pulling her bedroom colors together? This is all so interesting!
@@xzonia1 If she doesn't want to show Rowan's face on camera, she probably wants to avoid filiming him at all, but it would be funny if she edited emojis and other fun pictures over his face--especially if those pictures did not, in fact, match what they were saying about the colors! However, that sounds like a lot more work for her.
I had my colors done in high school and I swear it changed my entire life! I went from wearing really bright, neon and jewel-toned colors to dressing as a soft autumn a.k.a. earth tones and neutrals and my skin looked healthier, my hair color warmer, etc. I felt so much more confident in my appearance and also knowing what to look for when shopping.
Anyone else remember in Sherlock when Mrs. Hudson says “She taught yer to do yer colours. Apparently, I should never wear cerise - drains me.”? 😄 I just saw others share their memories of color analysis references here and thought I’d share mine.
I love how she was letting you comment on how it looked first before pointing things out. I could totally see how the color bounces off of your skin or makes you look more grey. Would love to try this for myself!
I did actually think you’d be Spring! But not until she showed the color swatch cards - right away I noticed all those vivid brights you love to wear; more so than in the Autumn palette
Hm not sure if she's saying the right thing in terms of warm vs cool skin tone. I have always thought of pink undertones as being cool toned - which is the skin tone that flushes and gets freckles. Whereas warm skin tones tan. But I haven't finished the video yet so we'll see..
she's wrong about a lot of things and made a mess of the whole thing, frankly. Freckles have nothing to do with skin undertones. Freckles are sun damage and are determined by your Fitzpatrick skin Phototype. Any colour season can have Fitzpatrick types I and II. Ruddiness and flushing are irrelevant to your undertone too.
My mum actually has a very old copy of a book called "Colour me Beautiful" which I think was the book which originally proposed the colour analysis in 4 seasons. One of the things in that book is that most people are instinctively drawn to the colours that suit them best. I don't know how common that actually is but I do think it applies to some people. The thing that you said about everyone being able to wear purple is actually in the Colour me Beautiful book. There are a few colours (teal blue and a sort of medium brightness purple) which are in between the seasons, neither warm nor cool, a little bit muted but not too muted, and they look okay on pretty much anyone.
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I always assumed this too, that people are drawn to the colours that suit them best, but it has turned out not to be true for me at all! I spent years assuming I was a winter and gravitating towards those colours, only to realise with some consternation that I am a spring. The colours that look best on me and make me really vibrant are not colours I would have reached for in a million years. Maybe because I was gothic/alternative as a teen, so those winter colours served me well for creating an edgy look.
My mom's a summer and I'm a spring. When I was growing up she'd absolutely nail the styles I like but would ask me to try them on in summer colors. We didn't understand then why I just didn't like them...
@@ihay472 me too. I was drawn to my best colors (red, yellow, orange). I was also drawn to pinks but have now found out that they're too cool for me. I won't throw them away - will still wear them sometimes but with more makeup on. I now like olive green (which I hated), but have discovered that it looks good on me since I'm an autumn.
It is a very common mistake to put light skinned autumns in the spring palette. However, you are an autumn. Look at the high amount of contrast between your dark eyes and light skin. And your eyes are a reddish deep brown, not an ashy brown. So, I disagree with her. I believe you are an autumn. The mustard and moss green looked the best on you also, a true hallmark of an autumn. The spring colors “pop” on you, but YOU “pop” in the autumn colors.
So sorry, had to break my pattern of not commenting on videos, but I have to say I have a problem with color analysis and how it can be limiting. It falls apart once you start looking at people with darker skin tones. It really upholds colonial and western beauty ideals that even, brighter(ahem, really means lighter but not as politically correct to say) complexions are ideal and that textured, duller(darker) complexions are not. Take a look at any of the images used on color analysis, and you'll find predominately white women. The few women of color get put into winter. The system was built for white women, and it is not inclusive. Color analysis also doesn't really take into account all the other things that affect our perception of how our faces look: how we look under different lighting, different make up, the color of the room you're in, the colors of the people next to you. It feels just another system/framework to limit and generalize people into categories that you then associate with personality traits. Hannah, if you love a color, wear it. If your color analysis gives you an identity crisis and makes you question well-loved items in your wardrobe, for the love of God, wear what you want, when you want, how you want. Don't let anyone you shouldn't wear a color, or have a certain hairstyle, or kind of jewelry, or that hats or glasses don't suit you. You know what is attractive always regardless of color or lighting? Someone being happy and confident in what their outfit (if color analysis makes you feel happy and confident, don't let me take that away from you. I just hate to see people grieving over not wearing a color they love).
I was hoping that they'd talk about different skin pigments a bit more. I think skin tones do have an effect on darker skin pigments, but perhaps not as much or in different ways because of the different levels of reflection. Perhaps (if they're comfortable), Hannah could invite some guests on with different skin colours for a similar video to compare the differences between them. It's definitely true that certain colours and shades suit different people, but at the end of the day if they aren't comfortable in that colour then they won't look good in it anyway. Some of the differences are quite subtle anyway, so wouldn't much difference in general life.
I have seen colour analysis done on people with darker skin tones though. Acc my insta algorithm shows me mostly poc people getting colour analysis. It might be about what makes Hannah look brighter vs darker because she has light skin but for others it is about what brings out the richness of their skin tone vs makes them look dull.
Check out Rossella Migliaccio from Italian Image Institute. She gives great examples on multiple skin tones and the seasons are broken out into more than just four!
yes you have to start with the cool white versus the warm white, with hair covered. Then you go to the cool/warm green, then the cool/warm red; and then when you've got 3 hits you confirm with the metals. You then have to go through systematic analysis to determine intensity and level of lightness/darkness and possible sub groups. This is the third analyst I've seen on the internet get it horribly wrong and so obvious to people with some training. This woman is one of the autumns, not spring. The analyst failed to understand the dominant features of each of the seasons and sub groups.
@@SueRosalie she is definately an autumn and definately NOT a spring. There is a reason she is drawn towards those autumn shades, I fell most are drawn towards their natural palette. I think she wasted time and money with this Sian person who clearly doesn't know how to color match properly.
When she described the difference between warm and cool skin as “stuff happening to your skin” I immediately lost confidence in her. Also, freckles, flushing and tanning aren’t synonymous; I have freckles and flush but it’s hard for me to tan (for reference I have cool toned skin).
I agree. I also disagree with what she said about white making a color cool and red making it warm. I've always heard that blue is cool and yellow is warm 🤔
She also described split-complementary differently from how I’ve always heard it. In my art and color theory courses, it was a 3-color palette, not two. Instead of a color and its opposite, say violet and yellow, it was described as a color and the two colors adjacent to its opposite. So, continuing with violet, it would be violet, yellow-orange, and yellow-green. Or, yellow, blue-violet, and red-violet.
I’ve been DEEP in a colour analysis obsession for a while now and I’m so happy you got yours done!!! I’m saving money at the moment but hopefully soon I’ll be able to get mine done. I’m fairly sure I’m either a true spring or a true autumn
I’m always trying to analyze mine and I seriously have no idea 😂. I don’t know why it’s so hard for me except my hair color is neutral and I have cool skin but with freckles.
Do you look better in light to medium clear colors (Spring), or do you prefer muddy dark colors (Autumn)? Does Olive Green look good on you? (Fall color)
@@cheryl-lynnmehring8606 I prefer autumn colours, and I think olive green looks good on me. However I’ve been told that olive green brings out “redness” in my skin so I don’t know if I just think it those colours good on me because I like them, if you know what I mean? Hannah wore mostly autumn colours because she likes them before finding out that they don’t 100% suit her!
Update: I’m a Spring! I went with House of Colour and got analysed as a Blue Spring, and not gonna lie I’m disappointed I’m not an autumn or a true/warm/golden Spring. I don’t really like bright blues!
This makes me feel more... sane? Like a relief from self-gaslighting. When I wear bright white I look SO DEAD but I haven't known why. Now I'm thinking it's because I must be "warm"! It's not that my skin is off, I'm just not "honoring" it's tones...
Interesting that she says red is the warmest colour because of its wavelength, but in colour theory red is often regarded as a neutral, and that cool vs warm come from a blue-based or yellow-based undertone respectively. So far she seems to be limiting her approach to just the four seasons instead of implementing the flows as well, but I still have a while to watch
so true! the only color expert I found that makes logically sense is @merriamstyle love her videos, this one is on the color red ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-T3fE_tp1o7c.html
@@evfie3 I have mixed feelings about her, she doesn't make too much logical sense to me but seems quite condescending to practitioners of other systems
Ohh I love that you've gone to a professional! Great video, I love seeing the process. I've been kinda obsessing about colour analysis the last few months and have been trying to figure it out myself, but it's very difficult to look at yourself objectively and without the right drapes and stuff. The only thing I've established so far is that I am not one of the people that black looks good on, even though I thought it did for so long. But I really wanna go to a professional, especially after this video so might start looking for one. Also, I would've guessed you're a warm season, but other than that, no clue.
Growing up, my friends would tell me they didn't wear black because they found it depressing, but they often encouraged me to wear it because they said it looked so good on me, so I think I'm one of the 10% that black suits. I do get a lot of wows! when I wear black (and people ask me if I'm ill when I wear white, lol).
i really love this video but could you perhaps reduce or remove the background music / beat as i was finding it hard to hear or take in what you were saying. my adhd brain cant focus on one sound
It's wrong to say pink and grey are cool. It depends on the hue. There are warm greys ("greige") and cool greys (that lean more towards blue/silver). And there are warm and cool pinks as well. Depending on which red you are adding the white in. Cool red (which leans towards the blue/purple side) or warm red (which leans towards the orangy side).
that's right. Blue, red, or yellow can be warm or cool. When you go to art school you have to buy both warm and cool red/blue/yellow for your basic kit. And yes all neutrals have an undertone. Greys have three: blue (cool); violet (cool) and green (warm). Warm green is the colour of natural stone and concrete. Many people jumped on the grey trend and painted the outside of their houses cool grey instead of warm grey and were then perplexed as to why their house appeared blue or violet. They chose the wrong undertone. If you have two adjacent colours with clashing undertones it is noticeable.
I love the fashion content, this was really interesting and fun! You should totally do a video showing what you already own in your wardrobe that is the spring colour palette :)
I’ve had colour analysis and it completely changed my view of what suits me! I had always been drawn to warm colours and it turns out I’m a winter. I can really see how true that is. I can see now that I definitely have cool skin, eyes and hair… BUT I’m a flusher! So the only bit in this video I can’t come to terms with is that warm-toned people flush and cool-toned people don’t.. that just feels so contradictory to me.
I was really curious what she meant by that because don't ALL people flush? I've never met someone who doesn't get flushed under the right circumstances.
@@favegirl13 I've met plenty, and they flush too. It might be harder to recognize on some than others, but their faces do change visibly, becoming even darker than normal for them..
So true! I think this principle overrides even the "you can wear any colour, so long it's the right shade" advice. Getting to know your season is so helpful and so much fun, but the most important is to feel good about yourself. If this is achieved by a colour that's not "officially" on your palette, oh well - it definitely shouldn't stop you from wearing it.
Getting my colours done really helped me so much. Every time I got dressed I felt horrible about myself and drab but couldn’t figure out why. I thought being pale and blonde I couldn’t wear colours and wore white black beige and muted dusty colours. Turns out I’m a light summer and was wearing all the wrong colours 😂 Obviously if you love wearing colours that don’t necessarily suit you it doesn’t matter if they make you feel good. For me wearing colours I know suit me helps me feel better.
I think this is so cool and interesting! Obviously these are just guidelines and anyone can wear whatever color and shade they want but it is really interesting to see how different tones really do make you look different!
Hannah is queen of getting me to watch shit I avoid. Always telling RU-vid not to recommend me those color videos. This was interesting though. A pleasant surprise.
I have a friend who I‘m CONVINCED is a soft summer: She has ashy blonde hair and cool blue eyes, her colors are extremely muted and blend into each other (low contrast), she‘s generally very light and everyone agrees that she absolutely cannot pull off gold. It MUST be silver! But she tans like crazy! But it makes her look more „beige“ than golden. I, on the other hand, am a true spring and I do not tan at all barely have any freckles. I do flush easily though
ability to tan has NOTHING to do with your skin undertone, it's just your Fitzpatrick Phototype. Any of the phototypes (they are 1 to 5) can be any season. You are likely correct that your friend is a soft summer. Study here. The Italian system is accurate and pretty foolproof. www.youtube.com/@colouranalysis_studio/featured
I am just like your friend! I’m a soft summer who tans (and flushes) really easily but absolutely needs cool undertoned foundation and looks much better in silver jewelry. I do pull a lot from soft autumn colors too. I totally disagree with the tanning/flushing = warm undertone remark.
I wear every color I want to. Just because a color doesn't suit me, doesn't mean I don't love it on myself. Who cares if it technically suits me if I love it.
Yes of course, but it's really interesting to understand why a colour you love might wash you out and how to chose the right shade of a given colour. It's just a bit of fun! I mean based on this video I do *not* suit black, but I'm still gonna wear my 90% black wardrobe that I love.
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I have found that the older I get, the worse I feel wearing colours that don't suit me, even if I like them. Most blues make me so drained and tired-looking that no matter how much I love the colour, I won't reach for it. It's easier to pull off the "wrong" colours if your skin is very smooth, no under-eye circles, etc.
I’m with Áine. When I was young I got away with anything, because when you’re young the freshness of your skin is more radiant than the wrong colour. Give it a couple of decades and you may change your mind.
@@nommh @Áine Órga same here. Looking better makes me feel better. When I was young I lived in black. It doesn’t suit me though and I won’t wear it now.
Ok, here's an idea. Maybe it's stupid, I don't know, but... If the colors change our complexion because the color reflects on our skin, then why not half-cover the lower part of the mirror so that we don't really see the drape color, just our face, to easily spot the difference it makes on the skin, and not be influenced by the taste in color? Ok, sure, our peripheral vision would allow us to see a bit of the color that is on the drape, but we can focus more on how our face looks 🤷♀
I question the method of draping; most consultants I know start with determining cool or warm, trying a peach against a pale pink, a teal against a cool blue and so on. Trying to establish between shades of all warm colours to start with - could not get that at all!
I love color analysis videos and the energy between you and the stylist. And, with you being a really likable person, it would have definitely been fun to watch you two going through the process, IF (please don't be mad at me for saying this)... if not the constant switching between front and side frame. Front-side-front-side-front-side, like every three seconds. It was really really REALLY annoying. Made it impossible for me to watch it longer than a few short minutes and made the whole content kind of pointless. :(
I've only had an online consultation done which told me I was a light spring. This has been a hard adjustment for me as someone who likes to wear black and jewel tones. But with the few bright pastel things I did own I could think back and remember getting compliments when I did wear them. It made more sense
Also colour and shape and style matches are not restrictive (you can wear anything and look great) it depends what look you want for example if you want to look more edgy from your natural colour and body type you can wear something that contrasts rather than embrace you such as baggy light clothing on a structured frame rather than colours and shapes that naturally embrace your shape and colour. 😎it's so interesting!
Thanks for sharing your experience Hannah, it was an interesting watch! Ngl while I get the idea from like a light and perception perspective, the idea you're Doing Clothing Wrong by wearing colours that make you happy has never sat well with me. Realised I'm prioritising more what I can see when I look down, whereas colour theory prioritises what I can see in a reflection/what others can see. Tbh I still think both are valid!
My mum has a very old copy of a book called Colour me Beautiful, which I think is what originally proposed the colour system in 4 seasons. The Colour Me Beautiful book talks about the importance of wearing colours you like to look at and feel happy wearing. It says that most people are naturally drawn to the colours of their season. I'm not sure how common that is, but I do think it applies to some people including Hannah, who was naturally drawn to orange and golden yellow. Colour me Beautiful also talks about the importance of picking which clolours you like best from within your season's pallete, which best fit your personal style, and that some people are sort of in between seasons. For example some people are in between Spring and Autumn, and look best in warm colours which are slightly muted but not very muted. I think that applies to Hannah too. The book also gives the example of there being bright and soft/pastel colours in all 4 pallets. If you want to wear bright colours or if you want to wear pastels you can totally do that, and you /should/. You can find colours you love wearing that feel natural for you within your season's pallet. I didn't like the aproach this particular stylist took, and it isn't necessary to take this aproach when using the Seasons system for colours. A different stylist could have worked with Hannah's preferences, rather than telling her that her preferences are "wrong" and that she has new rules that she needs to follow and is only allowed to break in particular ways. One of the benifits of wearing clothes from withing a seasonal pallet is that you can combine them however you like and the colours will harmonise rather than clash. This can be very helpful if you want a capsule wardrobe, or if you want to only buy new clothes occasionally. If you only buy from within your season, all of your clothes can be worn in combination, so it reduces how often you'd need to buy a new thing to "go with" another new thing. This can be particularly useful for accessories like coats, bags and shoes, which you want to wear with a lot of different outfits. If you buy a coat from within your season's pallet, it will go with all your other clothes. This stylist's suggestion to buy a coat in a different season because you like the colour, or to wear colours from a different season below the waist, is setting people up to feel frustrated that their outfits don't work because the colours clash. With the leather jacket exaple, if you already have a black leather jacket which you love and want to keep, then yes keep it, you don't have to replace it just becuase it's out of season. However if you want to buy a leather jacket now that you know your season, you can use your understanding of colour to choose one which will look better on you and harmonise with your other clothes. Black looks great on winters but can be too harsh for the other seasons. Grey, navy, and brown can also be used as neutrals if you want something that's less harsh than black. For Hannah I would recommend dark chocolate brown as a neutral because she is a very warm spring. I am also a spring but I lean more towards the clear side of spring. I use chocolate brown as a neutral sometimes, but mostly use navy blue and light grey. For a Summer, I would recommend a leather jacket in a dark grey or navy rather than black.
I've watched a bunch of videos about how to know your color season, but I've never watched a session actually happen and it was sooooo cool and useful to see! I think I'm a deep winter but now I'm scared to revisit it with the new info I've learned here 😅
Que manera más rara de hacer un estudio de colorimetría. Debería primero identificar si su piel es fria o caliente para identificar su estación e ir concretando para encontrar su subestación y no hacer ese galimatías con todos los colores. No me ha gustado esta profesional
I am a bit against this... I get that people want to do it but I will never be found there... I will just wear what I want when I want it and no colour will be not worn. I wear every colour in the shades that interest me and no one can tell me that I shouldn't wear it, I decide what I wear and don't wear, nobody else.
I had always think that you would look better in spring tones, not that you don't look good before, but you shine in a full balance, and I think thats very importante, I mean she didn't take out the oranges and yellow away from you just give you the ones that make shine and I love it, personally think that even though everyone can wear what they want it does make an impact when it is the wrong color, I mean some probably like colors that make them look sick or tried and people would ask about that even if their happy and healty.
Really interesting! I would just say wasn't the biggest fan of the cut from one camera angle to the other while Sian was in the middle of draping colours on you but might just be personal preference. To me, it slightly distracted from seeing how they sat with your colouring. Again, probably just me 😶🌫️
I had my colours done a few years ago. Was certain I’d be an autumn, as have always been drawn to deep, warm colours. Turns out I’m a winter, which really confused me for a while. Did quite a bit of research afterwards and I’ve come to the conclusion that I’ve got an olive skin tone, which tends to complicate matters slightly.
It can be warm or cool. I've got cool undertones and the yellow on top. I can look awfully shallow in some warm tones. It's not the same for everyone. I think Audrey coyne the RU-vidr does a good analysis of olive.
I learned about my seasonal coloring in HS. I'm a winter. All the colors that looked horrid on you look great on me, and all the colors that work best on you look terrible on me. I loved this video. I always had a hard time identifying springs! I don't think there are many. 💘
My sister-in-law, my daughter and I are springs. Everyone else in the family is a winter. We had our colors done years ago and they don't change with age or hair color. Hair should not be considered when determining skin undertones.
I was 19 when I had my colors done. My stylist started with silver and gold. She put the gold on and everyone else said it was nice. Then, she put the silver and everyone gasped! They said it looked like all the color drained from my face. I'm still a bright Spring, though my rich auburn hair has faded to a warm brown with translucent white highlights.
You should try a 16 colour season analysis as well! It’ll break down your season even more. Hence maybe why that one spring colour you weren’t a fan of on your skin. There’s light spring (summer spring), warm spring (autumn spring), true spring (spring spring) and clear spring (winter spring).
Those names in brackets are wrong and just confusing for people. You can see the correct colour wheel clearly in these videos: www.youtube.com/@colouranalysis_studio
@@SueRosalie there’s only so much you can say in a comment. I really like Carol Brailey’s videos personally. She breaks it down very easy to understand. I’ve seen their videos and they are great but don’t necessarily teach you to understand and it’s personally difficult for me to see in the videos the effect the colour is having.
@@tamarathorsen I agree. I like Carol Brailey's vids too and yes she uses the 16 season system. In that system, there are the in-between seasons aside from the ones in the 12 seasons. The in-between seasons are true bright (BW + BSp), True Light (LSp + LSu), True Muted (SSu + SA), True Dark (DA + DW). I think it makes sense because some ppl can wear colors in the 2 neighbouring palettes. I think there's also True Warm (Sp + A) and True Cool (W + Su). So 18 seasons(?) I've seen her online analysis of her clients and I agree with her findings.
@@kitty_s23456 I asked her once is it more like 20? If I understood her correctly, I think she was basically saying even though it’s called that we’re a wide spectrum of colours and can’t really limit it. For now, these are the names we have and that may change one day. She definitely didn’t say it like that but that was my understanding
This was such a great ep about color and the seasons! I got my colors done in the 80’s and I have just gotten interested in the topic again and have been told that I’m an Autumn! Hmmm, we’ll see! Have fun with your new colors.
I mean I appreciate the takeaways and the fun of the video but a lot of the facts are kinda pseudosciencey and it feels a bit like rigid in a way, “you don’t suit this” “you won’t look good” people can look good in any color. Its like the “balance your round face thing”. Idk a bit ick
@@VictoriaBick if you pay for a colour analysis they’ll tell you what suits you not agree with what colours you like, up to you what you do with that information
Yeah I’m sure wearing navy blue will help with my nervousness and communication skills. It would be fun to maybe debunk those statements and get more into causal science. I wish those people would take it less seriously, just admit that it’s just a bit of fun and not make claims about how the colors of your clothes affect physiological mechanisms.. huge charlatan vibes!
I got my colours done in the end of 2017. My friend bought it for me as a prezzie and she came with me, was a great day! Turns out I'm an Vibrant Autumn Leaf 😅 and can wear the brighter colours of autumn. Since having it done I wouldn't say it's reduced my spending but it has made me pick colours more carefully and build a palette that really works 😁💕
It's interesting. As a person who actually considers looking pale and 'sickly' beautiful and doesn't like the so called 'bright, sun-kissed' look, I absolutely loved on you all those that were rejected because you looked pale in them. I thought they were stunning. None of the options that were supposed to suit you would actually be my choice of what suits you. I am obviously not a colour expert. However, this makes me wonder whether such a service would be even worth it for me. If you think that beautiful is the opposite of what most people consider beautiful, I fear like the colour expert would pick what suits my face the least in my view.
@Aleksandra but if they flipped it then it wouldn't be the truth according to the colour theory? Let's say they think I'm an autumn based on what they've learnt about colours and what looks best. But I think I look best in winter. If they actually told me then that I was a winter it would go against their colour theory? I might be overthinking. But honestly, it's all really subjective. People like different things. It all comes down to in what you feel the prettiest and most confident.
@@madelinefindlay6973 I like overthinking. Actually (tbh/imo) overthinking does not exist! Every amount of thinking is just enough! lol. Btw I'm almost totally new to this, I think I started watching some other creator try it, long ago that I forgot everything, so I clicked here to refresh my memory, just mildly interested... "Overthinking" with you for the fun of it. :) I meant, when you would be trying colors, and your answer is whatever, based on how you like the way it makes your face look they may tell you, (after initial agreement how to go about it) :This does make you look X (beautifully pale?) based on their perception that color/s you "failed" to choose is/are (bright/sun-kissed) ideal from their perspective. Then you'd end up getting correct info (season-wise) based on your preferences. I think that should work. Maybe not? 🤷♀️🤔 I hope I explained well... Sorry for likely language mistakes, nnes here 🙋 If you have the budget for such service and would like exploring it, it's probably possible to be beneficial to you.
@@aleksandra... hi. If you like watching color analysis vids, I recommend these ones: Xixiplease (spring), ASMR Twix (summer), Hyeri Vlog (winter), Darcie (autumn), Jannat Ara (DA), HeyHershey (DW). Also the ones by Colour Analysis studios.
@@madelinefindlay6973 the thing is when the analysis is done correctly and you go out and wear the colours that are truly the most flattering to you, you WILL feel better wearing them and other people WILL give you compliments because anyone with a brain can see the colour harmony. And you won't look pale and sickly, your skin will look light coloured but vibrant and healthy and glowing. You may be winter. True and deep winters come alive in black even without makeup. Icy colours look great on pale skinned winters. True winters already have some black in their natural colouring, it's in their eyelashes, brows and in their hair even if their overall hair colour reads dark brown. Hair is made up of many tones. Unlike hair dye.
I haven't watched this yet but already knowing you're rebranding atm I'm worried the iconic yellow and orange Hannah will be no more by the end of the vid 😭😭😭
Great video! I had a feeling you'd be a spring because I think many of us are naturally drawn to the colours that suit us. I'm the exact opposite of you though, I love blues and pinks but most yellows and all oranges look terrible on me (I'm a summer)
Watching this now with the yellow drapes, I think you're somewhere in between Spring and Autumn. You definately suit warm colours better. I think the best ones for you are the ones that are slightly muted, rather than completely clear or very muted/dull. That's also reflected in what is most in your wardrobe. Humans are extremely varied, and the 4 category system is helpful to talk about the variation, but not everyone fits neatly into just one box.
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Yeah I find the 12 or 16 seasonal systems more helpful!
Got mine done a while ago! Also a spring. Hilariously, I had the opposite experience. Told my consultant "oh I don't wear yellow, just don't think it suits me" only to find out that it does! Wild
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I've only analysed myself but my big game-changing moment towards realising I'm a spring was when I first tried on a yellow sweater and realised it looked great on me. Absolutely mind-bending 😂
I am also spring and its really hard to find certain colors so I swear by rit dye to bump everything into the right shade if you are confident in mixing dyes
I always thought I couldnt be a SD because I'm 5'2" and don't look like sofia vergara but I'm built like mae west! This makes so much sense. Love your unique take on kibbe, it's so helpful and inspiring
The good news, which I imagine we will learn in this video is that no colors are off limits to any "season". There are just tones of that color that work better with different complexions. I think this is a common misunderstanding that some seasons can't wear green or yellow, etc. For instance, I'm a "spring". Tomato red (red-orange) looks great on me. Maroons (red-purple) look not great. Stark white is also not great, but any tone of off-white, ecru, etc. is fine.
@@Me-xo5tw There's probably an orange that looks OK on winters and summers, but if someone LOVED orange they could probably find a shade that flattered. You're right, though. Even when I was writing that, I thought "Black is a color not everyone can wear" So funny because it's such an elegant staple in many people's wardrobes. I had no idea that only about 10% of people really look great with black near their faces!
Loved it! I haven't done a professional analysis. But from doing my own research I think I'm a bright winter. Yes I have red in my face and freckles. But I look heinous in warm toned colours. And I never knew why. And its very hard because warm tones tend to be more fashionable. If I wear a mustard I immediately turn green. Same with orange. And most browns look awful. Black and jewel tones really suit me. And cool greys. Since I figured this out it made shopping and choosing clothes so much easier. I know instantly that a colour will or won't work.
I had my colour analysis done last year, but using another method, the expanded seasonal method. This one divides each season in three different palettes, based on the main component each person has to their beauty. Mine was warm/true/pure autumn, which is the warmest of all 12 palettes (this was surprising because I always thought I would be some winter). Anyway, loved the video! It made me curious to know which one of the springs you would be in the expanded method!!
Yeah tbh I think that's a better system than just the 4 categories. The 4 seasons are a good starting point for talking about colour, but there's much more individual variation than just 4 categories. I'm a spring, but for me the colours being clear is much more important than them being warm. I think for Hannah the colours being warm is the most important, and she actually looks best in colours that are slightly muted, not very muted or completely clear.
@@SomeoneBeginingWithI Yes, I totally agree. I would love to see a revisited colour analysis video someday. I bet she'd be a warm spring too. and it makes it easier for her to use autumn colors as well!
I always wear colour as it makes me happy. When you held the purple and green together at the end that made me smile as I have a purple pleated skirt that goes well with green tank top. I keep buying too many coloured or patterned clothes I have trouble making my wardrobe. I have brought some white and black items but so bland.
That was brilliant! I would love to know my colours, I wear a lot of black and mustard which I love but doesn’t always love me. I have recently discovered warm pink makes my skin come alive and I’m loving it, totally different from what I usually wear.
Loved this! I did it a few years ago and I'm a bright winter, so a vibrant cool colours closer to spring than autumn vibes, and suit black, plus both gold and silver jewellery. Crossover with some of your bright colours like the scary lego green haha!
I reckon I'm either Spring or Autumn, I tend to wear quite bold colours because I'm pale so I find pastelly type colours can wash me out a little. My wardrobe is mainly pinks and purples and reds, I like the quite striking colours though I do find orange and yellow don't massively suit me!
Loved seeing the metallics! I think they are really telling. I also love the drapes from Italian Image Institute that also have a metallic blue and metallic copper! Glad you had such a fun and interesting experience 😊
I’ve realised I know a weird amount about colour… maybe I should be getting into this field haha. I guessed you would be spring as soon as she took out the palettes at the beginning of the video 😂