What is the difference between Deep Winter and True Winter – how do I know which one I am?
Deep Winter and True Winter share the same cool, wintry foundation – but the mood is worlds apart. Imagine the difference between a forest buried beneath December darkness and an icy midnight sky where stars cut through the blackness. Deep Winter lives in dark, saturated colors with an almost mystical quality. True Winter inhabits ice-clear contrast where black meets white and jewel tones glitter like frosted gemstones.
If your color analysis placed you somewhere between these two seasons, the hesitation is perfectly normal. Both palettes are cool and powerful, yet they differ in how clear and how deep the colors actually are. Understanding that distinction will guide you toward the right shades for your wardrobe and makeup.
Comparison Table
| Trait | Deep Winter | True Winter |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | Neutral-cool | Cool |
| Clarity | Muted, saturated | Clear, pure |
| Depth | Deep | Dark |
| Best colors | Aubergine, dark red, forest green, dark plum | Pure black, ice blue, emerald, clear red |
| Avoid | Neon shades, icy pastels | Earthy, dusty tones |
| Overall impression | Rich and intense | Sharp and dramatic |
What sets them apart?
Picture a heavy velvet curtain in deep dark red – that is Deep Winter’s world. The colors carry weight and an almost melting richness. They do not need to dazzle to make an impact; they impress through depth. True Winter is instead like a snow crystal in sunlight: blindingly pure, uncompromisingly clear. Here, black-and-white contrast reigns in its purest form, and jewel tones – sapphire, ruby, emerald – are worn without a hint of gray veil.
Deep Winter borders Deep Autumn and borrows a touch of that warmer saturation. True Winter shares a boundary with Bright Winter and carries more of that icy brilliance. The essential question becomes: do your colors need depth and intensity, or pure clarity and maximum contrast?
How to tell which one you are
- The black test – Hold pure black fabric next to your face. If black gives you strong luminosity and your eyes light up, you are likely True Winter. If it feels a touch harsh and you would rather reach for a deep navy or dark forest green, that points toward Deep Winter.
- Saturation vs clarity – Choose between a saturated bordeaux and an ice-clear ruby red. Bordeaux harmonizing with your skin? Deep Winter. Ruby red making you glow? True Winter.
- Neutrals – Deep Winter handles dark brown and espresso beautifully. True Winter prefers pure black or charcoal gray without warm undertones.
Tips for the boundary
Standing right on the line? It is perfectly fine to borrow from your neighbor. Deep Winter can pick up a pure emerald green accent from True Winter to sharpen an outfit. True Winter can soften with a deep plum from Deep Winter’s palette when head-to-toe black feels too severe.
The secret is to keep the core of your own palette and season your looks with your neighbor’s strongest notes – not the other way around.
See also Deep Autumn vs Deep Winter and True Winter vs Bright Winter.
Want to know for sure? Book a personal color analysis.