After taking your test and an AI test, I seem to be Light Spring, but I’m drawn to strong colors. Which Spring subcategory suits me best?
It sounds like you’ve already done some research in color analysis and landed somewhere in the Spring palette. When hesitating between Light Spring, True Spring (also called Warm Spring), and Bright Spring, it’s often about how much warmth and intensity harmonizes best with skin tone, hair, and eyes.
What distinguishes Light Spring, True Spring, and Bright Spring?
- Light Spring – The lightest and most mild of the Spring types. The colors are warm but soft, such as peach, light yellow, and light green. The contrast between hair, skin, and eyes is often low to medium.
- True Spring – The classic Spring season with clear warmth. Here we find coral, sun yellow, and apple green – shades with lots of glow that make the skin tone radiate if the warmth is naturally there.
- Bright Spring – Still has warmth but more intensity and contrast. Think turquoise, cerise red, and clear blue. This type sits close to Bright Winter and requires being able to wear strong colors without them taking over.
Why are you drawn to stronger colors?
It’s common to like powerful colors even if you look better in somewhat softer shades. Personal preferences, trends, and associations with certain colors play a big role. Feel free to test your favorites near your face in daylight and compare with slightly lighter alternatives. Feel when the skin looks more even and the eyes get the most radiance.
How to find your sub-season
- Undertone – Does the skin look clear and fresh in warm shades like coral and apricot? Then you lean more toward True or Bright Spring. If it instead turns slightly red or orange, a milder Light Spring may be more harmonious.
- Contrast – Do strong colors sit on top of you or blend in? If high-contrast tones take over, Light Spring may be more accurate.
- Overall impression – Compare how your features react to both light and clear colors. Feel free to photograph and see which palette gives the most balance.
When is a personal analysis needed?
Determining the exact sub-season can be difficult on your own, especially when you land between two types. A professional color consultant takes into account undertone, contrast, and how different colors are reflected against the face. Through a digital color analysis, you get a careful assessment and a personal color palette to work from.
Read more about how seasons can overlap in Soft Autumn or Light Spring. For a complete analysis, book our digital color analysis.