Skin undertone identification
The AI identifies your undertone as Cool, Warm, Neutral, or Olive based on specific visible signals in your photos: the cast of veins visible at the wrist if present, the warmth or coolness of your complexion under ambient vs. direct light, and the surface tone relative to neutral references in the image. The Fitzpatrick Scale rating (I–VI) is also assigned to calibrate SPF recommendations in the skincare section.
Your precision HEX color palette
The palette is organized into three to four color families — each with a plain-language name (e.g., "Warm Earth Anchors," "Cool Steel Accents"), a brief rationale explaining why it works for this undertone, and a table of four to five HEX values with usage assignments (outerwear, knitwear near face, accessories, accent pieces). This is a working tool, not a mood board — each HEX is actionable.
Your Power Color
One single HEX is identified as your Power Color: the shade that creates the most contrast enhancement against your specific complexion, making your eyes more defined and your skin tone appear more even and vibrant. The report explains the specific optical science behind it and identifies the single most impactful placement — typically a face-adjacent garment like a collar, lapel, or scarf.
Colors to avoid — and why
The report identifies three to five HEX values to avoid, with a plain-language explanation for each: what they do to your complexion (create a grey cast, emphasize redness, make the face recede) and why that specific clash occurs. Understanding the reason makes it easy to spot similar shades in store without needing to memorize the list.
Applying your palette to a wardrobe
The palette comes with a brief application guide: how to use neutrals as a base, where your Power Color delivers maximum ROI, how to use accent colors without overwhelming the overall harmony, and how to navigate seasonal fashion colors that may or may not align with your undertone. The goal is confident shopping decisions, not a rigid rule system.