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True Autumn Season Guide

If you’re a True Autumn, you glow in warm, high-contrast colors with soft, low clarity. Think cayenne, toffee, avocado green, hazelnut, and warm olive.

Already know you’re a True Autumn? See your colors!

Are You a True Autumn?

Look for 3 traits: high contrast, warm undertone, and low clarity (saturation). You’ll find descriptions of each below to help confirm if you’re a True Autumn.

Contrast

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

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

  • Dark brown to black hair
  • Medium‑depth hair and very dark eyes
  • Medium-deep to deep skin paired with very dark hair or eyes
A true autumn man with warm medium-deep skin, dark brown hair, warm brown eyes, and high contrast.
A true autumn woman with medium-high contrast. The woman has

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 True Autumn, you’re looking for an obvious warmth (orange tone) in your skin, indicating a warm undertone. 

Warm

A warm undertone will show very visible warmth, leaning toward an orange-toned hue.

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 warm-toned light-depth skin.
Color examples of warm-toned medium-depth skin.
Color examples of warm-toned deep-depth skin.
Warm-Neutral and Cool-Neutral

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

Color examples of 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

Black, dark brown, and medium neutral brown hair contribute a neutral undertone.

True Autumn swatches of hair that are dark and neutral, and good examples of the hair tones thatTrue Autumns are likely to have.
Slightly warm

Dark red, auburn, and warm brown hair contribute to a slightly warm undertone.

True Summer swatches of hair that are dark reds, auburns, and warm brown, and good examples of the hair tones that True Autumns are likely to have.
Warm

Ginger, copper, and red hair contribute to a warm undertone often seen in True Autumns.

True Autumn swatches of hair that are red, ginger, and copper, and good examples of the hair tones that True Autumns are likely to have.

Putting Skin and Hair Undertone Together

True Autumns have a warm undertone, meaning they have a good amount of 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 True Autumn?

Warm-Neutral

Warm

Warm

Yes

Warm

Any

Warm

Yes

Cool-Neutral

Warm

Warm-Neutral

Maybe

Warm-Neutral

Neutral or Slightly Warm

Warm-Neutral

Maybe

Cool

Neutral

Cool

No

Cool

Slightly Warm or Warm

Cool-Neutral

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. True Autumns have low clarity, meaning most of their features will have the soft, gray, blended nature of low 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 high contrast, warm undertone, and low clarity (saturation), then you are likely a True Autumn.

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


Contrast

Undertone

Clarity

Likely Season

High

Warm or Warm-Neutral

High

Bright Spring

High

Warm-Neutral

Medium

Dark Autumn

Medium

Warm or Warm-Neutral

Low

Soft Autumn

Low

Warm or Warm-Neutral

Low

Light Spring

High

Cool-Neutral

Low

Soft Summer

True Autumn Color Palette

The features of a True Autumn are high contrast, warm undertone, and low clarity (saturation). The colors that will accentuate a True Autumn’s features will have the same attributes as their features.

  • They’ll be clearly warm
  • They’ll have a high contrast and typically be dark
  • They have medium to saturation in the colors
  • Think of dark, warm colors like cayenne, toffee, avocado green, hazelnut, and warm olive

Best Colors for True Autumns

These colors are likely to help you feel your best.


Best Colors

Red & Pink

Lychee
Mystic Pink
Sun-Dried Tomato
Crimson
Spice
Cayenne
Tomato
Fire Brick
Rouge
Merlot

Orange

Rust
Terracotta
Caramel
Toffee
Tuscan Sun
Fox
Tiger
Tangerine

Purple

Fig

Blue

Soft Teal
Ocean Floor

Green

Dusky Green
Camoflauge Green
Forest
Grass Green
Avocado
Dark Tropics
Peridot
Kiwi
Artichoke

Yellow

Brass
Pear
Gold
Mustard

Neutrals

Marzipan
Hazelnut
Buff
Chocolate
Walnut
Biscotti
Camel
Sand
Tan
Warm Olive
Coffee
Hickory
Almond
Sepia
Light Brown
Cinnamon

Secondary Colors for True Autumn

The colors listed previously aren’t the only colors that True Autumns 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 True Autumns, secondary colors all stay in the warm and warm-neutral hues, but can lean darker or softer.

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


Secondary | Warm and Dark

Steller Blue
Pine Green
Pecan
Boysenberry
Grape Jelly
Ruby
Scarlet
Wine


Secondary | Warm and Muted

Caribbean
Soft Peacock
Camoflauge Green
Moss Green
Seaweed
Dusky Pink
Sun-Dried Tomato
Warm Brick

Out-of-Season Colors for True Autumns

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 True Autumn’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 cool and light or cool and bright.


Out of Season | Cool and Bright

Marine Blue
Electric Blue
Azure
Bright Jade
Chartreuse
Light Magenta
Hot Pink
Brilliant Purple


Out of Season | Cool and Light

Avalanche
Cloud Blue
Pale Green
Soft Blush
Platinum
Ivory
Light Purple
Pale Lilac