STYLR

Finally discover the colors that truly make you shine

A simple photo is enough to identify your color season and understand which colors brighten your face… and which ones make you look tired.

You could be one of these seasons. StylR analyzes your photo and confirms your profile in a few minutes.

  • Discover your true color season
  • Understand why some colors suit you better than others
  • Get personalized recommendations in just a few minutes

Explore the 12 color seasons

Browse the 12 profiles. Tap the one that resembles you to explore its signs and typical colors.

The 12 color seasons are grouped into 4 main families: winter, summer, autumn and spring. Each profile has its own ideal colors, contrast levels and natural harmonies.

Why it's hard to know your season on your own

Identifying your season by eye means comparing undertone, contrast and intensity at the same time, three variables that daylight, screens and filters constantly distort.

Two people from the same group can get different recommendations. That's exactly what StylR measures objectively from a single photo.

How do color seasons work?

Color seasons are based on several dimensions of your natural appearance: your skin undertone, color intensity, the contrast between your hair, eyes and complexion, and the lightness or depth of your palette.

This is why two people with brown, blonde or red hair can belong to very different seasons. One color can brighten a face and make it look fresh, while another can harden the features, dull the complexion or create a tired effect.

The 12-season system goes further than the 4 classic families. It distinguishes, for example, Deep Winter from Cool Winter, or Soft Summer from Light Summer, in order to provide more precise and personalized color recommendations.

How can you know your color season?

Identifying your season on your own is often difficult. Lighting, makeup, hair color, photo filters or existing clothing habits can distort perception.

StylR automatically analyzes the natural colors visible in your photo to help identify your profile among the 12 color seasons. The result then helps you understand which colors to wear near your face, which shades to avoid and how to build a more coherent wardrobe.

Frequently asked questions about color seasons

There is no universal reliable distribution, because frequency depends on populations and analysis methods. Very contrasted or very bright profiles are often perceived as rarer, but the most important point is identifying the colors that truly flatter you.

Yes. Some people have characteristics close to two seasons, especially when contrast, temperature or intensity are intermediate. A more precise analysis helps identify the most flattering palette.

Black creates strong contrast. It can enhance deep or high-contrast profiles, but it may harden the features or dull the complexion of softer, lighter or warmer profiles.

Your natural season mainly depends on your core features: skin, eyes and natural hair color. It may seem to shift with hair dye, tanning or age, but your most flattering harmonies usually stay close to your natural palette.

Winter profiles are usually more contrasted, clearer and flattered by crisp cool colors. Summer profiles are also cool, but softer, more muted and less contrasted.

Deep Winter is defined by dark intensity and strong contrast. Cool Winter is mainly defined by cool temperature and clear colors, with depth being less dominant.

A color can clash with your undertone, contrast or natural intensity. It may emphasize redness, shadows, dark circles or make the complexion look duller.

StylR analyzes the natural colors visible in your photo to suggest a coherent profile among the 12 seasons. The result depends on photo quality, lighting and face visibility. For a more reliable result, use a sharp, filter-free photo in natural light.

Finally discover your true color season

A single photo is enough to know which colors flatter you and which ones to avoid.

Test my profile for free

Want to dig deeper? Read our full guide on the 12 color seasons and how they relate to one another.