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Bright Winter Season Guide

If you’re a Bright Winter, you shine in cool-neutral, medium-contrast colors with crystal-clear brightness. Think candy apple, shamrock, electric blue, brilliant purple, and hot pink.

Already know you’re a Bright Winter? See your colors!

Are You a Bright Winter?

Look for 3 traits: medium contrast, cool-neutral undertone, and high clarity (saturation). You’ll find descriptions of each below to help confirm if you’re a Bright Winter.

Contrast

Contrast is the difference in value (light vs dark) between your features, including your skin, hair, eyes, teeth, and eyebrows. Bright Winters have a medium contrast between their features. 

You likely have medium contrast if any of these feel true:

  • Medium-depth hair and medium-depth eyes
  • Light or fair skin paired with medium-depth hair or dark eyes

Undertone

Skin Undertone

Look at areas that don’t carry their own tint, like the sides of your face or the center of your forehead. Rosy cheeks or darkening around the mouth or under the eyes could impact the visibility of your undertone.

For a Bright Winter, you’re looking for a very small amount of warmth (orange tone) in your skin, indicating a cool-neutral undertone.

Cool-Neutral

A cool-neutral undertone will show just a bit of warmth, but also likely lean pink, yellow, or gray, rather than visibly orange.

Note that you won’t find a perfect match to your skin, as our skin is made up of many colors, but you want to see if your skin has a similar level of warmth as the swatches below.

Color examples of cool-neutral-toned light-depth skin.
Color examples of cool-neutral-toned medium-depth skin.
Color examples of cool-neutral-toned deep-depth skin.
Cool

If your skin shows less warmth and leans more heavily toward pink, yellow, or gray, you likely have a cool undertone.

Color examples of tones that are likely cool, cooler than cool-neutral.
Warm and Warm-Neutral

If your skin shows more warmth and leans more toward orange, you likely have a warm or warm-neutral undertone.

Color examples of warm and warm-neutral toned skin.

Hair Undertone

Your hair is a secondary but still helpful indicator of undertone. You’re looking to see if your hair has any signs of warmth, meaning that it contains orange. 

Check your natural hair color at your roots, the part of your hair closest to your scalp, as sun and environmental factors can alter the lightness and warmth of your hair. If you have gray hair or colored hair, try to look back at photos of your hair before it changed color. 

Neutral

Neutral dark browns, black, and ashy brown hair contributes a neutral undertone.

Bright Winter swatches of hair that are neutral and dark, and good examples of the hair tones that Bright Winters are likely to have.
Bright Winter swatches of hair that are neutral and medium-dark, and good examples of the hair tones that Bright Winters are likely to have.
Slightly warm

Warm light brown, auburn, and red hair provides some warmth.

Bright Winter swatches of hair that are slightly and dark, and good examples of the hair tones that are slightly warm.
Unlikely to be Bright Winter

Light and dark blondes, and light reds are too warm and too light to provide the cool-neutral and medium-high contrast of a Bright Winter.

Swatches of hair that are dark blondes and light red, and are too warm and/or too light to be a cool-neutral Bright Winter.

Putting Skin and Hair Undertone Together

Bright Winters have a cool-neutral undertone, meaning they have very little warmth in their skin tone and hair. Based on the undertones in your hair and skin, you can determine your overall undertone.


Skin

Hair

Undertone

Can be a Bright Winter?

Cool

Slightly Warm or Warm

Cool-Neutral

Yes

Cool-Neutral

Neutral or Slightly Warm

Cool-Neutral

Yes

Cool

Neutral

Cool

Maybe

Cool-Neutral

Warm

Warm-Neutral

No

Warm-Neutral

Neutral or Slightly Warm

Warm-Neutral

No

Warm-Neutral

Warm

Warm

No

Warm

Any

Warm

No

Clarity

Clarity refers to how clear and saturated your features are. High-saturation colors have no gray in them, and low-saturation colors have a lot of gray. This can refer to your skin, hair, eyes, and lips. Bright Winters have high clarity, meaning most of their features will have the vibrance of high clarity.

Determining Clarity

High Clarity

High clarity has high pigment with very little appearance of gray. High clarity eyes often appear sparkly, bold-colored, and you can often see a clear pattern in the iris. High clarity skin will again appear pigmented, and can often have a bright, glowy appearance. Overall, high clarity features will appear bold and colorful.

Low Clarity

Low clarity has low pigment and can often appear cloudy or gray. Low clarity eyes could appear foggy, a muted color, and an indistinguishable pattern on the iris. Low clarity skin can have a slightly gray, ashy appearance. Overall, low clarity features will appear blended and not stark against each other. 

Medium Clarity

Medium clarity sits between high and low clarity. Features are neither boldly pigmented and sparkly, nor gray and cloudy. Very dark features, like almost-black hair and black-brown eyes, can be considered as medium clarity.

Putting Everything Together

If you’ve found that you have medium contrast, cool-neutral undertone, and high clarity (saturation), then you are likely a Bright Winter.

If you meet most of the description of a Bright Winter, but not all of them, these are some seasons that share similar attributes:


Contrast

Undertone

Clarity

Likely Season

High

Cool or Cool-Neutral

High

Bright Winter

High

Cool

High

True Winter

High

Cool-Neutral

Medium

Dark Winter

High

Cool-Neutral

Low

Soft Summer

Medium

Warm-Neutral

High

Bright Spring

Bright Winter Color Palette

The features of a Bright Winter are medium contrast, cool-neutral undertone, and high clarity (saturation). The colors that will accentuate a Bright Winter’s features will have the same attributes as their features. 

  • They’ll be cool or cool-neutral
  • They’ll have a high or medium contrast
  • They have high saturation
  • Think of bold, bright colors like candy apple, shamrock, electric blue, brilliant purple, and hot pink.

Best Colors for Bright Winter

These colors are likely to help you feel your best.


Best Colors

Red & Pink

Warm Pink
Light Magenta
Bubblegum
Hot Pink
Magenta
Dark Pink
True Red
Candy Apple
Ruby
Strawberry
Dragonfruit
Azalea Red

Purple

Fuchsia
Brilliant Purple
Violet
Brilliant Violet
Iris
Eggplant
Indigo

Blue

Sapphire
Sky
Aqua
Turquoise
Lapis
Azure
Electric Blue
Marine Blue

Green

Rich Green
Forest
Viridian
Bright Jade
Bottle Green
Emerald
Mint
Shamrock
Bright Emerald
Chartreuse

Yellow

Lemon
Daffodil


Neutrals

Soft Navy
Basil
Charcoal
Biscotti
Chocolate
Coffee
Hickory
Stormcloud
Warm Gray
Steel
True Black
Great Blue Heron
Denim
Smoke
Latte
Cinnamon

Secondary Colors for Bright Winter

The colors listed previously aren’t the only colors that Bright Winters can look awesome in. Even within the 12 seasons, every face is unique, and some individuals could shine more in some colors than others. Here are some color categories that you may want to experiment with to discover what additional colors make you feel your most radiant.

For Bright Winters, secondary colors can lean into slightly warm and bold, or stay cool but lean a bit dark and muted.

There are far more secondary colors out there, so feel free to experiment with other colors that fit the description.


Secondary | Warm-Neutral and Bright

Cerulean
Deep Cyan
Shamrock
Grass Green
Lime Green
Red Currant
Watermelon
Fruit Punch


Secondary | Cool and Slightly Muted

Deep Sea
Compass
Sea Green
Soft Jade
Soft Fuchsia
Raspberry Jam
Deep Fuchsia
Grape

Out-of-Season Colors for Bright Winters

Even if a color is “out-of-season”, it doesn’t mean you can’t wear it. You can and should wear whatever colors and clothes that make you feel great. Out-of-season colors should be a helpful tool, but not cause you to throw out your favorite shirt.

Since these colors are less complementary for a Bright Winter’s coloring, if you use these colors, you may want to wear them further from your face, like on shoes, bags, pants, and skirts. 

The most out-of-season colors will be warm and soft, missing the boldness and saturation that Bright Winters thrive in.


Out of Season | Warm and Light

Honeydew
Champagne
Alabaster
Wheat
Peach
Pink Lemonade
Cherry Blossom
Cream


Out of Season | Warm and Neutral

Tan
Biscotti
Light Chestnut
Warm Olive
Spice
Sun-Dried Tomato
Warm Brick
Ginger