No such thing as a neutral undertone!!

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  • čas přidán 5. 07. 2024
  • Here, I provide the explanation, and some celebrity examples for why a neutral skin undertone doesn't exist!
    Get typed by me:
    merriamstyle.com/typings.php?...

Komentáře • 421

  • @notaclue822
    @notaclue822 Před 3 lety +64

    I thought that of the cool seasons, summer was more muted than winter because winters can wear stronger, more vibrant versions of the cool colours. A lot of this video made good sense though. Too often they consider eye and hair colour when it's the complexion that matters. Sadly, even hair dressers and cosmetitcians can't be trusted to know this very well. It's no wonder people are confused.

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie Před rokem +1

      yes. You can consider hair colour and eyes once you're determined undertone and the season, and are going through the palettes to determine if the correct season is a sub category.

    • @CatsMood
      @CatsMood Před 4 měsíci

      Summer is cool undertone!

  • @MaireCeann
    @MaireCeann Před 5 lety +175

    For me, the problem is I never get to tell when something "looks better on me", even though I can with others. I think Im neutral just because some people around insists I'm warm, and I "feel more comfortable" with cool colors. For some people like me it's is really tough to understand..

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +51

      Hi Maria, you could try watching my draping video. I feel like the hardest person to color/body type is always yourself! So you're definitely not the only one.

    • @MaireCeann
      @MaireCeann Před 5 lety +3

      Merriam Style Thanks! I will :)

    • @TheBaumcm
      @TheBaumcm Před 4 lety +2

      I have found that draping works best for me.

    • @zufaanek
      @zufaanek Před 3 lety +3

      Same here! Its so frustrating

    • @0nly.bhadbby40
      @0nly.bhadbby40 Před 3 lety +1

      SAME .

  • @pinkroses135
    @pinkroses135 Před rokem +15

    I think she's using a different system for summer and winter than the other season system people are used to where summer is muted and winter is bright.

  • @Kpower
    @Kpower Před 6 lety +247

    I'm trying to understand your point, but I don't.
    The way I see it, yes it's basically impossible for someone to be smack dead in the middle and thus neutral. However, at the same time, it's also nearly impossible for someone to fall smack dead in the warm or cool either. My theory has always been that it's about what your skin tone falls closer to. In retrospect, to the middle (neutral side) my skin leans slightly in the warm side, but overall, my skin tone is closer to the middle than the warm. If my skin tone was a ph (and the ph of 1 is warm. 7 is neutral and 14 is cool) I would fall into about a 6. That's why I personally consider myself neutral with a touch of warmth.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +77

      The ph thing is a good example. If something is pH 7, we call it neutral. If something is pH 1, we call it extremely acidic. But everything between 1 and 7 is acidic. pH of 3 is also acidic. So, anything between warmest and neutral is also warm, just a bit less warm. The way you describe your skin, "pH of 6", sure you can call it 'neutral with a touch of warmth', but that is still warm. It would be warm and muted in this case, so you'd look great in beiges, creams, and peaches.

    • @Kpower
      @Kpower Před 5 lety +40

      On paper that works, but I always find myself looking more tired when I wear colors like that. I only have one picture of me wearing a muted color and I had to wear a lot of undereye concealor, color correctors and a make up look that was more muted just so I would not look dead. I usually get complimented on saturated colors. I don't understand why people automatically assume that skin has to be muted if it is not super warm or cool even though real life colors don't work like that.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +12

      Oh! No of course people can be bright undertones. Not everyone is muted that's not what I'm saying. You are probably a bright undertone if you look best in saturated colors. This is only the neutral skin tones. Do you look better in yellow or blue?

    • @Kpower
      @Kpower Před 5 lety +17

      "Do you look better in yellow or blue". Tbh I don't know. My guess is yellow, but I look good in both.
      I've asked people what my undertone is and I've been called everything from warm to cool to neutral to olive to whatever. The only thing that makes me think I have a bit of warmth is because my skin under my eyes is clearly warm. The rest of my skin is ambiguous to me. That's why I think I might be a neutral.

    • @burgermister7580
      @burgermister7580 Před 5 lety +17

      A personal skin overtone and undertone makes us unique. There is no perfect neutral warm cool. This is my theory WE ARE LIKE THERMOMETERS HOW COOL OR WARM ARE WE?? YOU HAVE A UNIQUENESS ABOUT YOU THATS WHAT MAKES US ALL SPECIAL... THERE PROBABLY ARE ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES OF A PERSONAL PALLETT BUT SOME DAY WHEN THIS COLOR THEORY IS MORE ADVANCED THAT WILL HAPPEN. this Munsell theory has been known since the 1800s.The dinosaur age was the mid 1970s late 80s Beauty for all seasons was ahead of thier time. Then now 2018 it's more ahead. But still has more to go.. It's just getting these personal production of these unique palettes into existence. I'm 55 maybe when I'm 95 that will come about. Lol.. I have been doing color analysis for 35 years. They still have a long way to go. Think of your self like a thermometer.

  • @humanormachine2936
    @humanormachine2936 Před 4 lety +35

    Interesting video. This topic gets tricky for people because many times, a person's skin tone doesn't lean very obviously warm or cool. As you approach a neutral skin tone, it gets more difficult to determine whether you learn warm or cool because these differences are so subtle.
    People also expect certain colors to look incredible on them and certain colors to look terrible, when many people can pull off a lot of colors. It's just a matter of which ones look the best, but that doesn't mean the ones that aren't your best automatically make you look dead.

    • @amnbvcxz8650
      @amnbvcxz8650 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Except colours that don’t fit you do make you look dead

  • @user-ud6uv6xm6w
    @user-ud6uv6xm6w Před 5 lety +80

    the hair and eye colour tests are super inaccurate considering it only works on caucasians. coloured people all have dark hair and eyes but there definitely are undertone differences..

    • @ingridrodriguez3273
      @ingridrodriguez3273 Před rokem +6

      Also non whites tend to have medium or dark skin and look good in more colors. Also I do think people are “neutral” if they can pull off both warm and cool colors,

    • @MCTape-MCScan-MCGlue-MCCargo
      @MCTape-MCScan-MCGlue-MCCargo Před rokem +2

      There are dark black/brown skinned people with plenty of cold tones in the undertone and light/pale skinned people with plenty of hot tones in the undertone

  • @ashleycnossen3157
    @ashleycnossen3157 Před 5 lety +107

    I learned that the neutral undertone isn't a specific color, but a mixture of both cool and warm undertones.

    • @cringeproof100
      @cringeproof100 Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly

    • @leahalcantara5949
      @leahalcantara5949 Před 3 lety +8

      Its so confusing!! Sometimes when i take a picture of myself i look rosy and then next thing i know im yellowish i don’t understand Q-Q

    • @ririimari
      @ririimari Před 3 lety +2

      So every olive?
      No-
      There are warm or cool dominating undertones.

    • @katitadeb
      @katitadeb Před 3 lety +10

      @@leahalcantara5949 it's cause there's another balance: red and green
      You can be warm and have some red in your skin tone giving a peach skin color
      An dyou can be cool but be olive/green (no red in your skin) an dmaje you look "yellowish" but that's just the lack of redness on your skintone

    • @0nly.bhadbby40
      @0nly.bhadbby40 Před 3 lety +3

      @@AnHeC the thing is my am neutral . The thang with me if that my undertone can be warm & sometimes can appear cool . Also I’m
      Brown skin & I still look good with cooler color too .

  • @JuliaKirsty
    @JuliaKirsty Před 6 lety +49

    I'm extremely interested in this whole topic. What makes the most sense to me is the ColorBreeze system. By that system, Angelina is a toasted soft summer (a deeper summer with a hint of warmth, but primarily cool, which means she'd look best in darker, muted and primarily cool colors) and I'm a sunlit soft summer (which is primarily cool with a bit of warmth, light and muted). There are muted types in each season. And usually it's hard to see which undertone those muted types have because it's not too obvious. That's also why muted colors (which are often called neutral) look better on them. I used to ditch the whole color typing thing for a long time because I look awful in typical summer colors, spring colors wash me out, autumn colors make me look sick and winter colors are simply just overpowering on me. Muted summer colors in the lighter spectrum look great on me. By your theory I would be a winter, right? My haircolor is medium ash blonde, skin (overtone) is yellowy but with a distinct blue undertone which, in certain lighting, makes it appear green, my eyecolor is grey-blue with yellow specs which can make it look like a mint green depending on lighting and what I wear. I prefer picking up the colors of my natural coloring and wearing variations of them. That's the easiest way for me to shop for my complexion. I look awful in true blue and true orange. I look washed out in true red and true green. I look awkward in yellow or turquoise (gives me an ugly "color-beard" if you know what I mean). Blues are a struggle (I know which ones suit me, but I can barely find them in store), soft pinks are easy, soft greens as well, purple shades work but not all of them. Some colors work only when I wear makeup others work amazingly without makeup (such as the soft pinks and greens). I don't want to say your theory is wrong because the colors you picked for those two examples where absolutely fine, it just doesn't suit my perception of the 4 seasons. You would probably also find the right colors for most other people. So actually it doesn't really matter as long as the result is alright. To me there's no such thing as going by "you're bright so you are this season - you're muted so you are that season" and also no such thing as a neutral undertone. Maybe when you pick a foundation color, but not when it's about deciding what season you are. There's light muted, light bright, dark muted and dark bright. It's all about contrast, clarity and depth. And this is so damn interesting, I could talk about it all day long xD

    • @idontkn0ww
      @idontkn0ww Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks for this information! the colorbreeze system definitely makes a lot of sense!

  • @arwenives
    @arwenives Před 5 lety +75

    This is helpful but it seems like in real life a 3% difference leaning cooler or warmer or even a 40/60 split would still make you appear more or less neutral and allow you a greater range of cooler/warmer you can pull off, perhaps leaning a bit more one way or the other. I tend to find that muted blues, pinks, greens and yellows, especially muted pastels, look good on me but also bright yellows and blues as well as pure black and white so I really don't know what that makes me!

    • @SS-qg9jk
      @SS-qg9jk Před 3 lety +2

      interesting!

    • @ingridrodriguez3273
      @ingridrodriguez3273 Před rokem +4

      I can pull off cool AND warm colors. I think it’s more a matter of my style and preference because I look good in both. I have light/medium skin so look for medium saturated colors . Like true red , true blue even true orange look great. Also almost any bright color works even neons.
      So I’m pretty sure I’m close enough to neutral because people have told me I look great BOTH in orange and fuchsia

    • @arwenives
      @arwenives Před rokem +3

      Update: I now realize that I am actually cool toned with some olive and that’s why I was confused. I think some yellows work for me probably because of my personal preference in that they soften y appearance by essentially making me look a bit dulled out. So sorry to those I confused with my own confusion 💖

  • @JuiceAtJulies
    @JuiceAtJulies Před rokem +10

    I tried draping yellow and blue and I honestly can't tell what looks better. The blue made my skin look more olive, and the yellow made it more peachy. I prefer the color blue over yellow, so I'm biased to think it looks better even if that might not be true... The blue definitely made my eyes and hair pop more though! I have black hair and really dark eyes.

  • @YuukiHyouketsu
    @YuukiHyouketsu Před 5 lety +62

    Undertones aren't just about finding the colors that work for you; they're also about finding foundation tones that work. Foundation companies use the term 'neutral' for skin tones that are not close to either the warm or cool end of the spectrum. It helps create a more inclusive set of available colors. I was never able to find a foundation that worked until I explored neutrals. It's a way to describe the skin, and it works, as skin undertones are varied and need further analysis than just "cool" or "warm".

    • @calamitchell1113
      @calamitchell1113 Před 5 lety +5

      5UNNYR4Y3 keep in mind that “ neutral”surface color does not mean neutral undertone! Surface color and undertone are two totally separate things. You can two women who exactly match the same foundation or skin surface color and yet one will have cool and the other warm undertones. Women at makeup counters rarely have a clue about undertones.

    • @mesia2453
      @mesia2453 Před 4 lety +1

      Well I found my exact foundation shade out of sheer luck. I mean I just wanted to get the borjois foundation because the packaging was cute and now here I am buying only that shade of foundation

    • @ingridrodriguez3273
      @ingridrodriguez3273 Před rokem +3

      Yes neutral foundation always matches me

    • @SueRosalie
      @SueRosalie Před rokem +2

      actually no. Foundation is the exception. For foundation you have to match your overtones e.g. olive skin, and consider things like ruddiness etc that need correction. For everything else you match undertones.

  • @jamesbriggs5740
    @jamesbriggs5740 Před 6 lety +59

    A Winter is bright and cool. Summer is cool and muted.
    Kathy B.
    That is how I always learned it.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +15

      Understandable--it was popularized that way. But I called winter cool and muted because the colors of winter are grays/cool, while the colors of summer are cool and bright (bright summer sky).

    • @judithcooper8094
      @judithcooper8094 Před 5 lety +29

      The original naming of winter was for the high contrast of the shadows ie black and white. Nothing to do with colors since a winter landscape is ice and snow. This swiching is just confusing.

    • @EM-vl6fu
      @EM-vl6fu Před 5 lety +30

      @@merriamstyle The old school colour analysis theory describes winter as cool and bright. It's all cool, jewel tones and high contrast. Summer colours are often more greyed and the summer person's appearance is more muted.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +14

      Sure. In my system I call winter cool and muted because of winter colors being gray and dreary. I think it makes way more sense this way.

    • @sharonsamuel9987
      @sharonsamuel9987 Před 4 lety +17

      Absolutely correct! How in the world can a colour expert call a Winter muted??? I've seen a lot of inaccurate colour theories, but this definition is staggeringly wrong.
      Spring is warm and bright.
      Autumn is warm and muted.
      Winter is cool and bright.
      Summer is cool and muted.
      I agree with her that there are only 4 seasons, but she's really in error with 2 of them.

  • @ritachoung8622
    @ritachoung8622 Před 4 lety +6

    When you rearranged the muted colors my mind was blown. Love your work!

  • @IsabelCurdes_photos
    @IsabelCurdes_photos Před 4 lety +14

    I so like your approach to colour theory. This makes so much sense to me especially as I am coming from a background of painting and photography. I would have said that there is a theoretical possibility for a neutral undertone but the probability is infinitesimally small :-) I really don't need the seasonal reference, it is way easier with just sticking to warm and cool. Great job!

  • @ontheturquoisetrail
    @ontheturquoisetrail Před 2 lety +5

    Love lots of your videos. As someone with blue/yellow eyes and both cool pink and warm yellow undertones as well as purple blue and green veins ... (constantly fluctuating between cool and warm based on the season aka how much sun I have seen) ... if I don't call myself neutral ... what do I call myself? :)

  • @colourmequaint9690
    @colourmequaint9690 Před 3 lety +12

    It's really hard to compare dresses, unless you take out other contributing factors. The cameo green dress is much darker than the "blush" one (honestly it looks even like a pastel icy pink on my screen, not muted either). Plus, some people are going for harmony, others for contrast...
    I'm just more confused than ever and have decided to try wearing stuff all day (instead of briefly holding them up against my face). I'll probably know instinctively if the color is working or not.
    It seems that there are no rules for olive tones and you have to assess each color individually. And I feel that eye and lip color DO play a role as well, which is why I look good in a muted petrol blue or a cooler dusty rose even though I am generally more warm...

  • @adriannep3547
    @adriannep3547 Před 4 lety +51

    13:13 I thought she looked good in the Light Peach😅

    • @anarchsnark
      @anarchsnark Před 3 lety +7

      She looks good but it brings out weird tones in her skin but she grows in the blue.

    • @Adri-yc3tb
      @Adri-yc3tb Před 3 lety +1

      I think what looks weird on her here is that the color of her lipstick is too bright and too warm for her. It looks separate.

  • @toninot4293
    @toninot4293 Před 5 lety +30

    Do you agree that there is also a cold yellow? Like a pale lemon. I think I am a Winter. Corn yellow look terrible on me, but a cooler yellow is fine

    • @suzannemoogan9675
      @suzannemoogan9675 Před 5 lety

      I know what your saying however I am the opposite, every other colour apart from lemon or brown looks great on me, lemon makes my skin seem sallow brown is the same but the rest of the palettes look amazing including black
      I have never understood this I can even wear mustard, rust etc, however never dark brown, tan or muted orange on the other hand neon orange and pillar box red looks spectacular on me or so people have commented.

    • @julijakeit
      @julijakeit Před 4 lety +3

      I think you're talking about lime yellow and yes, as a summer, I can wear this muted, cooled down yellow without looking sick.

    • @katitadeb
      @katitadeb Před 3 lety +2

      When we talk about color theory tea, it exists a "cool" yellow, but in personal color analysis that's not the case.
      In color theory yellow is the neutral, but here green is the neutral, so in personal color analysis there's not such a thing a school yellows, but warm greens
      And those colors look better in warm people, cool skin tones look grayish tbh
      But, if you're cool and you really want to wear yellow then of course eyou should pick the "coolest" yellow
      As you see the naming of the colors (in terms of temperature and "neutral") changes if we talk about color theory used in graphic design and personal coloring used by stylists
      Also consider that there will always exist colors from the opposite temperature that don't look bad at all, but its definitely not the bets of the best as your own colors

    • @mariazoe6396
      @mariazoe6396 Před 3 lety +2

      I agree with you. I am winter and lemon yellow is good on me

  • @angelamillikin3843
    @angelamillikin3843 Před 5 lety +23

    I like your system and your explanations. Somehow, my mind can more easily follow this. I only get into trouble if I start thinking...Oh! I am a winter! and suddenly find myself thinking of the 12 color system, rather than focusing on cool and muted. If you keep making videos with all your awesome examples (love, love, love your focus on ethnicities) I think it will help. Your work is really important in this field. So keep emphasizing warm vs. cool and chroma... And then we will come to understand an AL winter is something different... Thank you!!

  • @angelrose9117
    @angelrose9117 Před 4 lety +4

    I believe the girl below. If neutral green and red can exist so can neutral skin colour. I've seen people with neutral skin aswell. And yes I understand how colour works I'm an artist and a makeup artist.

  • @titemartiniquaise
    @titemartiniquaise Před 5 lety +42

    Sorry if I sound annoyingly know-it-all but your 2 VS infinity doesn't work that much. Why? Because all the color between the neutral red and perfect neutral green are neutral too. And it's a infinity of color too ^^
    So the chance being neutral suddenly go higher, at least mathematically

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +6

      I didn't consider that thank you! I should have formalized it better. But upon further thought, I'm still evaluating the chances of seeing a neutral color in real life to be zero, even if you include the infinite number of neutral colors between neutral green and neutral red. On every slice along the neutral green-neutral red axis, there will be an infinite number of cool and warm renditions of each of those colors. For example, let's say there's a color that's 0.01% neutral red, and 99.99% neutral green--this color is neutral. However, to the left and right of it will also be an infinite number of cooler renditions of it, and an infinite number of warmer renditions just along that slice. So, that probability will also be 1/inf, just as it is for the neutral green alone, and the neutral red alone. You can then take the next slice of 0.02% neutral red, and 99.98% neutral green, and evaluate that probability to also be 1/inf, so you will sum these probabilities along the infinite number of slices, but then you're really only summing a bunch of zeros. There's something very weird about infinity as you must know. I was a physics major myself, though I'm not sure I was ever any good at it. :P

    • @titemartiniquaise
      @titemartiniquaise Před 5 lety +1

      @@merriamstyle I'm not good at it too 😅😅😅
      Now I know why when I look at your videos, I feel like talking to a friend in college XDDD

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +3

      lol!! it's still fun to think about sometimes. There's this one numberphile episode (it's a youtube channel) on the different types of infinity, talking about how there is infinity between 0 and 0.1 for example, but there's also infinity between 0 and 10--which one is larger, they're both infinity after all? infinity is so weird. your comment reminded me of that numberphile episode.

  • @thetrillianaire
    @thetrillianaire Před 2 lety +5

    This makes the most sense of any system I have seen for practical application in matching colors to skintones. I can tell you're actually thinking it through for logical consistency rather than taking someone else's word as gospel. A lot of people are super attached to whatever "rules" they read first, but I always felt the various ways of looking at color types I've seen on blogs and youtube have gaps or contradictions that this system does away with. Yes, primary red is a "warm" color in art, but it's clearly a neutral in terms of the skin color blue-yellow spectrum and what colors actually look good on existing skintones. Very good video

  • @MistyyLou
    @MistyyLou Před 4 lety +1

    Just want to say thank you sm for helping me Finally find my undertone! I’ve watched so many other “find your undertone” videos & tried all the “tricks” (e.g comparing gold & silver) and only became more confused.. until I watched yours! So Thank you!

  • @passionateaboutpink
    @passionateaboutpink Před 5 lety +1

    Thank for the video. Very informative. You have the most soft, melodious voice I've ever heard.

  • @youmisheardme
    @youmisheardme Před 5 lety +11

    here's what i don't understand - i look best in the most vivid colors, but i can't tell if my undertones are warm or cool. blue looks better than yellow (though not by much), but orange and purple look equally good. muted versions of the colors are okay, but not as good. i feel like this goes against your theory!

    • @sayuritube
      @sayuritube Před 2 lety +1

      Same - I suit luminous colours, and the temperature matters less. I think this is called high chroma :)

  • @paintedlady55
    @paintedlady55 Před 3 lety +20

    I found this video interesting, but I have to disagree. I do have a neutral skin tone. I don't look good in either of the extremes of warm and cool colours but suit those that are 3 steps either side of the neutral colour and my best lipstick colour is a pinky bronze. Any thoughts?

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 3 lety +28

      I would say you're most likely warm and delicate. warm and delicate is often placed into cool even by color analysts simply because they tend to look good in cool and muted colors, but warm colors can become too much. another thing with being warm is that cool colors look ok, but vice versa isn't true--cool undertones really can't handle warm colors. forgive me if you already are aware of what I'm about to say--when warm wears cool, they can look more golden because of simultaneous contrast, but when cool wears warm, they look more gray or more blue, which is almost never desired. in this sense, WD can wear both cool and warm colors so long as they're muted, just like you're saying. Most people who think they're neutral are actually WD because of this. And I guess in practice, 'neutral' lends well to the colors that WD can wear. But technically, WD is still ever so slightly warm. In practice though, they can wear cool so they say they're neutral, which isn't an unfair assessment for practicality. I have a video called golden overtones with cool undertones that you could check out where I show examples of warm and delicate, and see if that resonates.

    • @paintedlady55
      @paintedlady55 Před 3 lety +5

      @@merriamstyle
      Thanks for your reply which I found most interesting. I will definitely check out the video you recommended.
      I have taken the Kibbe test which shows me to be a classic. This in itself doesn't surprise me as I tend to dress the recommended way anyway. However, what did surprise me is that Classics are supposed to have some height and I am only 61 inches tall.

    • @kokolatte825
      @kokolatte825 Před 2 lety +7

      @@merriamstyle you did SUCH a great job of explaining this. I'm going to watch the other video about golden overtones, cool undertones but I think you are right. I must be a warm delicate. That makes sense for the first time. You explained the gold jewelry and everything. I literally tan and burn easily. It has more to do with sun exposure for me. So I had a hard time figuring it out..
      I really LOVE the way you explained the blue and yellow in our skin. The part about the red and green and the possibility of truly being neutral. This video is for every person who can't figure out their skin tone. You did phenomenal with this. Maybe make a video explaining the warm delicate. That might help more people figure out what they are.

    • @rebelurthesun
      @rebelurthesun Před 2 lety +5

      I know this comment is very old now, but in case you are still looking for input, I too thought I was neutral. Only neutral makeup ever worked for me, I've never had a preference for white or cream, and I had a hard time seeing which tones my skin looked "better" in with the naked eye. In the last few DAYS, I have discovered I'm warm and delicate. My advice would be to 1. Watch the video she recommended if you haven't yet. 2. Take a photo of yourself in natural light with a blue draped shirt, then a khaki green (in the same value if you can). Take it without makeup on if possible. My eyes couldn't see a major difference, but the camera was able to give me a direct contrast and confirmed that I'm warm and delicate.

    • @KaliKali-hv9bt
      @KaliKali-hv9bt Před rokem

      @@merriamstyle good explanation!!!

  • @annaandersson3907
    @annaandersson3907 Před 3 lety +5

    Both bright blue and bright yellow looks good on me. Muted blue isn't as good. But Muted pinks, purple and dark red tones does. Both warm and cool. I have a neutral foundation. Slightly warm make me look like a lemon and Slightly cool make me gray. I have been diagnosed as al 4 seasons by different experts. So I don't know

  • @shinobipanda2331
    @shinobipanda2331 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video-- helped me understand my undertone so much! I was always confused because the gold / silver test, the daylight wrist vein test, and the white / off white test were always so indefinite. I realized recently that I'm just an autumn. Browns, muted greens, and oranges really make me look so healthy and bright, I was always so thrown off by the fact that bright colors threw off my complexion and made me look kind of sickly. This video really helped me understand why that is. Thank you!

  • @rosyblooms3352
    @rosyblooms3352 Před 3 lety +3

    🤯 I have been trying to figure out my skin undertone for a loooong time now. The more research I did, the more confused I became 😅 your no such thing as neutral video and your color draping video gave me the right tools to finally figure out what works best for me. Cool muted colors for the win!!!
    I know it sounds silly to want to live by a personlized set of fashion rules. But for me, I am the kind of girl who wants a simple life. One less decision I have to make during the day with a curated capsule wardrobe.
    💟Love all your videos. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.

  • @TheeScarletRose
    @TheeScarletRose Před 5 lety +11

    This helps so much! I've been very confused, because my hair is a very dark cool brown. My eyebrows are almost black. However, I have warm olive eyes and light warm skin. Taking the hair and eye factor out, I now know that I am warm and muted. I think a huge problem with a lot of autumn palettes you see on the internet is that the colors can sometimes be represented as very bright, which is ok sometimes, but if I'm wearing a yellow for example- I can't pull that super bright mustard. It has to be more of a pale golden. Copper and rose gold look better on me than yellow gold. I'm still not 100% at ease with my natural hair color, but this absolutely helps me understand where I was having the trouble.

  • @candicedoss1112
    @candicedoss1112 Před 4 lety +4

    This is so helpful! Thank you💖
    I can wear pretty much any color, gold or silver jewelry both look fine. I've had bright blue hair for a while now and I keep wondering why I always look tired. I'm warm and delicate!

  • @charlottelouise690
    @charlottelouise690 Před 3 lety +6

    I have very fair olive skin so blue and yellow both look awful on me 🤣 I really struggle with finding my colours because I think I sit in autumn but I cannot wear anything with too much yellow or blue because it brings out the green/grey in my skin. I'm baffled!!

  • @Victoria_Bryant
    @Victoria_Bryant Před 5 lety +1

    I have been trying to figure out my undertone for so long. I am bk having trouble figuring it out. I an very fair but have bits of both. Do you do personal color analysis? I would appreciate and love your help! : )

  • @pryvacy1392
    @pryvacy1392 Před 5 lety +14

    What if you look best in muted strong colours? So basically brights that are slightly muted. Like you'd look best in mustard but not beige or bright yellow. I get your point on this but I don't know if it works for me. I still consider myself neutral because I can pull off cool and warm colours though I favour warm. The only colour I look ghostly in is bright blues, grey lilac and light greens. I look amazing in bright red, muted browns/ rust, dark grey, gold, copper, yellow, dark green, muted blues, bright pink, mauve, dark purple, midnight blue, black and cream.

    • @pryvacy1392
      @pryvacy1392 Před 5 lety +1

      I missed out this but the reason I feel neutral is that I look my best in colours that are in betweens. That you can't tell if it's one or another colour and a mix of cool and warmth.

    • @usezasedn
      @usezasedn Před 5 lety

      @@pryvacy1392 this is just like met, you listed the same exact colours! i never know what i am, i also think i am neutral, maybe slightly warm. or slightly cool? it's so hard to find the right foundation because it's always looks too strong, too bright.i think i am slightly warm, but i do look great i muted blues. however, in very specific shades, it can quite easily get too blue or too green

    • @humanormachine2936
      @humanormachine2936 Před 3 lety

      @@pryvacy1392 I'm a true autumn, and this describes me. It usually means that you have a lower chroma, or lower contrast between your skin and hair. I love muted, warmer toned colors. I can go for gray, but ideally a warm gray.

    • @michellechouinard4958
      @michellechouinard4958 Před 3 lety +1

      Is it possible you have an olive undertone? Sounds a lot like my issues, and I'm definitely olive (though of course olives have their own range of warm to cool).

    • @katitadeb
      @katitadeb Před 2 lety +1

      More than being neutral I think it's about skin's tolerance towards our "non colors". Generally warm skin is less affected by its worst colors than cool undertones (I mean a warm skin looks "better" I their worst colors than a cool skin in their own worst). Also dark skin has more tolerance. The same happens to me, I have a clearly warm underone, medium to soft in the spectrum (my skintone is medium to light) , however I look good in navy blue, bright lilac and black, are these my best colors like rich mustard/yellow, peach and olive green? No, but my skin can tolerate those cool colors. Does it mean I'm a neutral? Absolutely not
      It's a fact we all fall rather in one side or another in the spectrum, but some skins are more tolerant and flexible to some colors

  • @Marsolan
    @Marsolan Před 3 lety +2

    Recently discovered you. Love it. You are so smart!!!

  • @loyaltyasmr5449
    @loyaltyasmr5449 Před 3 lety

    Thank you sooooo much! Ive been watching videos for weeks and this is the only one that really helped me understand the basic concept of being warm/cool undertone if u feel u r neutral !!! and finding out if you are better off wearing true colors or more toned down colors meaning if the top of your skin or "overtone" is more light/dark bright red/ or more golden but thats a little more confusing and a whole other thing is that the whole "what season are you"?! I would love to understand that part!!! But over all I have to try that trick at the end. Although you do have to understand the basic understanding of the color theory/wheel/ and colors that have more added black or white in them as far as clothing or whatever. And THEN this video brings it home. Just my opinion but it really helped :)

  • @captain_starblossom
    @captain_starblossom Před 4 lety +3

    Nice work and approach. I just have to ask how come you started talking about primary colors and then used a non primary red. I would like to see somebody manage to use magenta red (which is the primary red, the red shown contains a lot of yellow already) to explain skin tones and seasonal color analysis

  • @CW-rx2js
    @CW-rx2js Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you. I always thought I had warm undertones...but then I just found out I look neutral - and than I an olive. Although I look neutral, my overtone is yellow and undertones are cool - so they mix and overall I look neutral. So I agree that undertone itself isn't neutral.

  • @elizabethkirkeide2458
    @elizabethkirkeide2458 Před 4 lety +1

    This video is the best explanation of skin tone ever. Thank you.

  • @Velveification
    @Velveification Před 6 lety

    Thank you so much for doing this type of videos, they are super helpful!

  • @dianamary6170
    @dianamary6170 Před 3 lety +6

    I've always considered myself neutral because I think I almost any color is flattering on me, muted, bright or pastel. For example red is my favorite color, yellows look great on me except for that what I call 'Easter yellow', all blues look fine on me but my best blue is a soft powder blue. I understand the mathematical analysis of statistics of warm, cool, and neutral. I think from our human visual perspective if you are close to neutral than it just makes sense (to me) to just say you're neutral... even if technically it is most likely that you lean slightly either cool or warm. this is my view on the subject if you are extremely close to neutral. but hey maybe I'm wrong. I would be interested to know what you thought of my skin tone! Hope this somewhat makes sense what I'm trying to get across. Good video! Interesting subject! (also the veins in my wrist are purple)

    • @marie.theartist
      @marie.theartist Před rokem +2

      I understand, I am close to neutral but slightly warm. And I can pull off bright, light or muted colors. I also can wear any metal color: gold, silver and rose gold. However, rose gold looks close to my skin color. So, I do believe there is such thing as neutral. Plus, skin color is not just one color. It’s composed of the primary colors, yet one will always be a little more dominante.

  • @carolinw.7351
    @carolinw.7351 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you for this, it really helped me!

  • @JustineBrownsBookshelf

    I have light skin with a bit of yellow and hazel green eyes. Sounds warm right? But I hate orange, yellow and brown on me.

  • @RayneWalker
    @RayneWalker Před 3 lety

    Great video, I could tell I was a winter just from the information you provided. Really helpful!

  • @MileydisH
    @MileydisH Před 3 lety +2

    Wow what an amazing well detailed video this is. I was 31 years old today when I finally figured out my actual under and over tone. Lol. I think we I subconsciously “Know” what we are without even realizing. For example you asked to place a bright yellow and a bright blue piece of clothing/cloth against us to try to figure things out. I kid you not I have “ZERO” piece of clothes in those colors 😆 I had to go to my daughter’s closet to find those two bright colors. I am 100% a muted Autumn, and my closet reflects that.

  • @badpoetry33
    @badpoetry33 Před rokem

    Great video. Very good point about the jewelry colors. I thought I was an autumn all this time, but now I think I might be winter. The problem is … where do I get drapes? And if I don’t have a very attuned eye for these tones, how do I know if I’m getting a ‘pure’ blue or yellow?

  • @ramose83
    @ramose83 Před 5 lety

    very helpful ... But, what about white and black for winter type?

  • @lisamurdoch2525
    @lisamurdoch2525 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome explanation! Thank you!

  • @RosyLife79
    @RosyLife79 Před 3 lety +6

    So is neutral undertone green or olive skin tone?

  • @chrissymccallister7951
    @chrissymccallister7951 Před 5 lety +1

    Hi! I love your vids! Your doing a wonderful job 😍 Can you create a video showing celebrities wearing all the colors you categorize as cool and bright, while comparing each of those shades to cool and muted colors? (and another video comparing warm and bright/muted colors?) It would really help me sort thru my closet filled with both warm and cool...and get rid of stuff 🤪 Thank you!

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +2

      I'll definitely be making more videos about color really soon! You could check out my video titled Comparing Two Deep Winters where I compare two cool undertones with dark features (one ends up being cool and muted, and the other ends up being cool and bright). Don't know if you've already watched it but maybe you'd find it interesting! Thanks for your comment!!

    • @chrissymccallister7951
      @chrissymccallister7951 Před 5 lety

      That is one of my favorite videos of yours 😊 I'm a cool but sill figuring out muted or bright? Its interesting my closet has a lot of blue both bright and muted, hot pink and blush, white, grey cream. My oddball colors I look great in are coral or neon yellow. But Ill def keep watching. This is so much fuunn!!😋

  • @MinkaLovesPineapples
    @MinkaLovesPineapples Před 4 lety

    What would you say for someone who is cool toned in the winter and mainly looks great in cool clothing but looks great in some warm toned colors in the summer when she gets tan?

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 4 lety +1

      I would say they have naturally warm pigment, but there isn't enough of that pigment in winter to make them warm, so they remain cool because of how the light reflects from the capillaries and veins (giving the skin a blue-ish undertone). It could also be a change in nutrition, or anything of that nature....we like to think undertones don't change because maybe it's convenient or brings us some order, but the reality is they can and do change. I have two videos on it--one is called something like 'the lightest skintones', and the other is called c'hanging undertones.'

  • @frankie5779
    @frankie5779 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for this video! I thought I was a neutral-cool undertone. I have both blue and green veins. I am fair-light with dark brown hair and dark brown eyes. I burn easily but can also tan. I think I look better in yellow gold jewelry than silver or white gold even though I think I’m more cool than warm. Is it possible that I’m a fair-light olive undertone? I am Sicilian and was born in Sicily but previously thought I was too light to be an olive undertone.

    • @josiekoerner5345
      @josiekoerner5345 Před 2 lety

      My grandpa is from Sicily too. I thought I was neutral because I have a light olive skin I can see both green and blue veins and burn a little but tan pretty good . My hair is medium brown and my eyes are medium brown too. I think Mediterranean people do tend to be more olive tones. My ancestors are from Italy and Spain mostly. I don't look good in bright colors except true red.

  • @jessicabowens214
    @jessicabowens214 Před 4 lety

    Nice, well explained. Thanks.
    Makes way more sense going into detail about it than other videos making such vague statements about this subject.

  • @jamesbriggs5740
    @jamesbriggs5740 Před 6 lety +6

    The best test is lipstick. Do you look better in warmer or cooler ? pink or orange?
    Kathy B.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +16

      This is a good idea. But I disagree that it's the best test--pink and orange lipstick are cool and warm but they have red mixed into them. Why not skip the middle man and test directly--blue or yellow draping. Not to mention that some people may grab a slightly warm pink lipstick vs an orange lipstick and the whole thing would be a waste of time. But most people, no matter how inexperienced, can find a blue and a yellow somewhere around the house--much easier.

  • @lanadecker8800
    @lanadecker8800 Před 4 lety +1

    Seriously - the best explanation ever!!!

  • @TheGreennblue
    @TheGreennblue Před 5 lety +3

    Makes sense! Thanks!

  • @saminashakeel8029
    @saminashakeel8029 Před 4 lety +2

    She is too good 😀finally I understood how to figure out how to find your undertone😁

  • @carolpardee7740
    @carolpardee7740 Před 5 lety

    Interesting video. What is your season/undertone if you think you look best in maroon, aubergine, navy, and charcoal grey, and black?

    • @dariakulyk4616
      @dariakulyk4616 Před 5 lety +2

      I'm guessing you're almost definitely a winter - those are almost all muted cool colors, or at least one of the two.

    • @lifeofthepardee
      @lifeofthepardee Před 5 lety

      I am often typed as an autumn or I should say warm and deep but I am never 100% convinced that it is correct! I think it is possible to straddle autumn and winter and that's what I thought neutral was but the video did make some good points as to why no one is neutral toned.

  • @JoAnnCorley
    @JoAnnCorley Před 4 lety

    i just loved this example... makes so much sense!

  • @josiekoerner5345
    @josiekoerner5345 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm still confused I wished you would have shown more examples. I always thought I was neutral, I'm a light olive like Lady Gaga. My ancestors are from Italy and Spain mostly. I been told i'm a warm fall than I been told I am a cool winter. I have a hard time finding the right color of foundation the yellow makes me look dull or even orange because my face has a lot of redness to it. And cool tone either washes me out or makes it look even more red. Then one lady did a color match at the Estee Lauder counter and matched me at 2N1 Desert Beige which was perfect , it toned down the redness and you can't see it on my neck and with a rose toned blush it gives me a nice healthy glow. I'm not sure if rose colors are cool or warm though. Gold jewelry blends in to my skin but silver stands out on me . So I was wondering what you think .

  • @magdakar4252
    @magdakar4252 Před 4 lety

    I find it difficult for springs to get dressed in their color palette during winter and autumn, as most clothes are muted... From coats to shawls or tops... Any suggestions?

  • @BunnyLang
    @BunnyLang Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much. I am one of those that has had the hardest time figuring this out.

  • @TheBaumcm
    @TheBaumcm Před 4 lety +3

    I have to agree that there is no neutral really according to your definition. However, for those of us that fall more clearly into the tonal groups, light vs deep and bright vs muted, we can often wear colors in both temperatures. For example, myself I am most obviously deep but neutral leaning because my eye and hair color are so dark and my skin had a green undertone. I can wear rust and cool burgundy, all shades of blue, orange and purple but it depends on saturation and contrast. For me warm vs cool matters less.

  • @rebeccag.2381
    @rebeccag.2381 Před 4 lety

    I don’t know if you can help me sight unseen. I have blue gray eyes with a tiny bit if greenish yellow around the iris. Dark blondish red hair. My skin is very fair. I’m basically pink, but have lots of golden freckles mostly on my arms. None on face as I wear a hat and makeup with sunscreen. Not brown freckles. I burn sooo easily and am fairly sure that I have a cool under tone. But I’m wondering if all the golden freckles make me warm? I look good in gray, navy, black, red, coral, baby blue, slate blue and people tell me I look good in pink, peach and light yellow.I think yellow looks just ok. The only colors I really don’t like myself in are bright orange and yellowish green. I have heard that because I have so much red in my skin, that I shouldn’t wear red, but I get loads of compliments when I wear true red. Am I warm or cool? Silver looks great on me, but rose gold looks better. Gold looks just ok.

  • @swdshchck
    @swdshchck Před 2 lety +2

    I don't think I'll ever figure this out. I always thought I was warm, but just recently I switched to cool, then neutral. But even if neutral does exist, I can't possibly be neutral since I look terrible in both that bright green and purest red you showed on your chart. And I can't tell if my veins are blue or green, but I do have a few smaller veins that are definitely purple, if that means anything. I don't tan easily and will burn if I'm not careful, but I can acquire a nice tan if I just take it slow. And I feel like I look good in different colors if I have a tan compared to when I don't. I just don't know...

  • @frankie9698
    @frankie9698 Před 3 lety

    Does anyone know of any fake tans that are good for cool tones? I tend to look orange very easily so I suspect something a bit more pink might be better for me

  • @nurn.3969
    @nurn.3969 Před 5 lety

    Can u do a table like that ...like winter n autumn...but for cool olive or warm olive if such exist. Sorry....I'm trying to understand. I'm not studying art or anything like that. But may b I can learn abt colors. Oh... what about nudes for olive skin tone. If u have any suggestions. Tnx so much again

  • @vivie5995
    @vivie5995 Před rokem +2

    i agree that the possibility of being completely neutral is very small, but as for the season system, i would argue that hair and eye color is VERY important.Skin tone can determine which hair/eye color looks best on someone, but the color which one wears should take their current hair/eye color into account. For example, personally, spring colors look better when I have black hair, and when I dye my hair a light brown/ginger color, Im autumn all the way.

  • @staceykersting705
    @staceykersting705 Před 4 lety +1

    Srsly....is 'cameo' green the same as camo green? I'd really like to know.

  • @meriemmimi104
    @meriemmimi104 Před 5 lety +3

    i totally understand you . great video

  • @amyv.
    @amyv. Před 5 lety +31

    I personally preferred Rachel MacAdams in the soft rose, cause she looked vibrant. The cameo green kind of made her look too muted.

    • @staceykersting705
      @staceykersting705 Před 4 lety +11

      I def' did not think her skin looked good in the pink. Look how glowing she is in the green.

    • @julijakeit
      @julijakeit Před 4 lety +9

      sadly, the pink dress looks separate from her, even with iced hair to make her appear cooler but her skin is not looking as good in pink as in green. It's difficult for people to see how good or bad they or others look in different colors, especially when talking about different skin type people. For example, I am summer, mu husband is autumn, he loves my blue but it makes him look sick and his skin sallow, accentuating all imperfections. When I directed him to aqua blue, petrol blue and any warm toned blue, he finally admitted that he looks better in those. Just because you see someone dressed well in specific colors doesn't mean that you will look good in them too. If you like the pink dress, I am guessing you are cool yourself.

    • @appel_sin
      @appel_sin Před 3 lety +2

      Totally agree) she looks dull in warm green(

    • @gigglypuff3589
      @gigglypuff3589 Před 3 lety

      Same

  • @annaanna1981
    @annaanna1981 Před 6 lety +1

    great video. I really appreciated the in-depth analysis and you got to the crux of the matter by essentially elimliminating the contrast/chroma from 12 seasons. i was classified aa soft summer but have been on my own considering winter. why do think angelina jolie is classified as soft autumn by the system?

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +3

      Thank you! i actually thought about that a lot when making the video (specifically why she looks sometimes warm and sometimes cool). i think angelina jolie often wears an artificial tan that's warm-toned, which is why she seems like she may be 'soft autumn' (aka the warmest season). i quickly googled it and found truth-is-beauty's blog, and looking at her post i can see why she thinks angelina has a warm undertone--with those pictures i would also think that.
      the way i see it is this--if a celebrity ever looks good in gray or blue, they are a cool undertone. why? because self tanner is often warm-toned, so when they are not tan, that's when i look to see their true season. take a look at some of these photos of angelina in muted cool colors when she isn't tan. if she were really a soft autumn (closest is a spring i think), then she would look great, even when pale, in warm colors. but when she's pale she looks good in cool colors. undertones don't change like that. no matter how tan/pale i get, i'm still a winter, and no matter how tan/pale my mom gets she is always a spring. it's actually remarkable that it works that way. (like in the blue dress i gave as an example in the video, she doesn't have a fake tan and looks great). here are some more:
      images6.fanpop.com/image/photos/38300000/Angelina-Jolie-Place-Beautiful-shoot-angelina-jolie-38346663-334-500.jpg
      encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQN5zJ5ACGBQtKcB01UAcc92UDCS6oJ-beHfMkjQ9D6MP0w2mHKtA
      i.pinimg.com/originals/22/e8/d3/22e8d3730bf00f6f79367e9b6bb35461.jpg
      gl-images.condecdn.net/image/b8GXxPENYwb/crop/1280
      cdn.stylefrizz.com/img/angelina-jolie-blue-max-azria-dress-sag-awards-2009.jpg
      cache.emirates247.com/polopoly_fs/1.646968.1485241634!/image/image.jpg
      --------------------------
      here, she has a warm fake tan and doesn't look that great in a winter color (but brad pitt looks worse with his fake tan lol):
      i.pinimg.com/originals/8e/a5/ab/8ea5ab979ccd0c168940f31e916be00f.jpg
      -----------------------
      and here all of a sudden, bronzed and tanned, soft autumn:
      www.imagesyoulike.com/images/c/32x24/c2238.jpg
      -----
      wow i kind of feel like i wrote so much i might as well make a video about it now--thanks for the question, as you can see i can go on and on!!

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +3

      oh, and julianne moore is another great example of a soft autumn who is actually a summer (cool undertone). because she often wears fake tan and bronzer, which is a shame because i think her skin tone is absolutely beautiful and she looks stunning in bright cool colors. just google image julian moore blue dress and you'll see what i mean. not to mention nicole kidman, who has very low contrast coloring, but also looks stunning in this bright blue dress--she isn't lost in it at all! here's the image of nicole kidman:
      hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/nicole-kidman2-1520249202.jpg?resize=480:*

    • @annaanna1981
      @annaanna1981 Před 6 lety +1

      I think a part of the rationale for those classifications may be the belief that if you are a winter you have to look great in black. So Angelina does not look amazing in black. i.e she cannot be a winter, even if cool colours suit her. I am stuck at this point, because I look sad in black, but great in blue.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +2

      ohhh i see. but on top of that, I think we have added confusion because the 12 season system doesn't map onto the four season system. what kind of blue do you look good in? in the four season system winters don't look great in black, it's too harsh on them, so it's consistent that angelina is a winter.
      by the way, as a winter in the four season system myself, i know that the closest thing to winter is 'soft summer'. i really hate the 12 season system because it's so confusing and the names are different from the 4 season system and just confuses people more!! in four season, a winter would only look good in cool muted colors (example, 'deep winter' in 12 season is not a winter at all in four season, deep winter color palette is actually closest to a summer in the four season system), so when i mean winter, i mean to say cool muted colors, and the closest to that is soft summer. so angelina looks good in cool muted colors, and black is not muted!
      I made a video called why 12 season color analysis is BS, I hope you watch it! Don't want for this comment to turn into another essay lol.
      I suspect because you were classified as soft summer (closest in four season is winter), and because you don't look good in black (black is too harsh on winters), you might be a winter (in four season!!). you black may be a dark charcoal, not a pure black.
      but first, what kind of blue do you look best in? if it's a bright cool blue, then i suspect you might be a summer (in four season, not 12 season!), but were only classified as soft summer in 12 season because maybe you have low contrast coloring (light blonde hair, light skin?). if you are a summer in four season, the theory says you should look good in black, but better in bright blue. how do you look in bright yellow, peach, or hunter green, and what's your worst color?

  • @rynmarr8566
    @rynmarr8566 Před 6 lety +3

    Hey I have had this problem for so long! I just can’t tell what my undertone or season is, could you help? You helped me find my kibbe type and I would love your opinion on this matter.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +1

      Oh sure! Have you watched my video how to find your color season? It should be super easy but I'd be happy to help. Send over some photos of you in all different colors in daylight/good lighting. Also would be good if less make up but it's ok if you're wearing some make up I'll still see the skin of the arm for example against the colored fabric.

    • @rynmarr8566
      @rynmarr8566 Před 6 lety +1

      I sent them! I have been looking so much recently that I feel like I look terrible in everything!

    • @rynmarr8566
      @rynmarr8566 Před 6 lety

      So I came here for the much needed help, lol. Thank you so much.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +3

      lol!! you are too funny!

    • @rynmarr8566
      @rynmarr8566 Před 6 lety +1

      Ok I sent the second set of pictures!

  • @marie.theartist
    @marie.theartist Před rokem

    I find that I look better with dark but slightly bright colors: classic red, white, black, royal blue, etc. And I also look in muted colors. I struggle with finding what undertone I am. I can pull off silver, gold and rose gold metals. I have blue grey eyes, with a flick of amber in one eye, dark hair and my skin tone is light, but not fair. I am not sure if I am winter or autumn because the colors you mention look nice on me.

  • @sunnivameyer8263
    @sunnivameyer8263 Před 6 lety +1

    I have watched many videos on warm and cold colors and many of them define red as a warm color. Do you have any comment? I also wonder who do you think looks good in bright neutral colors (red and neutral green).

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 6 lety +2

      This is a great question/comment. First, I'd say that defining red as warm is simply incorrect. I'm working on a video on that!!!! About the two neutral colors (neutral green and neutral red)--those colors would not really ever be found in real life. When you make red as a pigment, it will always be skewed slightly in the warm or slightly in the cool direction because nothing in real life is perfect. The same for a 'neutral' green. I believe 'neutral green' and 'neutral red' don't exist in real life, only in our imaginations, just as the 'neutral skin tone' for the same reason that neutral skin tones don't exist.
      But, if they were to exist, neutral red and neutral green would do nothing good or bad for any of the seasons (just as classic lines will not do anything (not add yin or yang) to the body types and leave them as they are), a neutral red or green will not accentuate any aspect of the warm or cool undertones. But I stress that I don't believe you'll find examples of a true neutral red or a true neutral green in real life, so it's definitely interesting to think about, but at the same time won't apply when you're shopping or picking clothing.

    • @sunnivameyer8263
      @sunnivameyer8263 Před 6 lety

      I sometimes find it difficult to decide whether a red or a green is cool or warm, especially if the red or the green is mixed with black or white, or even has been muted. But I was wondering whether the red and green in a color wheel should be quite close to neutral, and I could buy one to bring with me when shopping to ensure that I don`t buy warm colors by mistake.

  • @hannahfontana8340
    @hannahfontana8340 Před 5 lety

    Can u still wear neutral foundation

  • @Adri-yc3tb
    @Adri-yc3tb Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks to you I was able to find out that I am a cool and bright undertone even though every single color analyst said that I was neutral and olive skin. Yeah, I have bright olive skin but I always found super weird that color analysis states that neutral undertones can wear gold and silver but I always thought that gold jewelry wasn't doing me justice. And that's why, it's not about being neutral, but the fact that I have very bright skin and really dark hair as I'm Asian, warm colors never look good on me, so why does gold jewelry needs to look good on me? No, it doesn't look that good. That's why I donated all my gold jewelry to my mom, who is warm and muted. At least she looks better in gold than me XD when I was buying clothes based on the neutral olive skin pallette, my fashion was all over the place, so now I'm trying to pay more attention to contrast and cool colors that make me look better.

  • @Malin0908
    @Malin0908 Před rokem +1

    My skin is yellow, but my veins are both blue and green. My hair appear medium ash blonde (muted) but when The sun shines on it, it has a golden sparkle to it. My eyes are grey/light blue, with rusty jewels. I look bad in earthy colors, and very warm colors look bad. Im confused!

  • @petruskafranova
    @petruskafranova Před 4 lety +3

    Still no idea what I am

  • @spontaneousjane
    @spontaneousjane Před 2 lety +1

    Wow, you explained why I can’t wear shiny metals! I’ve always loved matte finishes and I thought it was simply a preference but it must be because I’m an autumn. I used to think I was a spring because I don’t feel good in deep autumn colors but I was confused because I didn’t like the brightness of spring either. I thought spring was light and autumn was dark. I didn’t know the difference was actually bright or muted.
    I’ve learned that i don’t have high contrast between my hair and skin so I need soft, muted colors. I guess that means I’m an autumn. I just have to stick to medium colors. I hope I’m finally understanding this correctly!

  • @rosed3023
    @rosed3023 Před 3 lety +1

    Are you able to explain why someone would look good in both warm and cool colors? I feel that in general I’m delicate warm, and soft warm colors look amazing on me. But so does blue!
    Between yellow and blue, yellow looks awful and blue looks lovely.
    But between orange and pink, orange looks great and pink makes me look blotchy and/or washed out.
    Soooo....
    Can I be a delicate warm, except for blue? Is that a thing?

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 3 lety +2

      it's not a thing! you're simply warm, most likely warm and delicate. i do have a video on a related subject about universal colors that you could watch if you're interested. in short, there are universal people. warm and delicate looks good in warm and cool, but cool doesn't look good in warm, a good rule of thumb is if you wear colors cooler than your undertone, they'll look alright.

  • @elisea7684
    @elisea7684 Před 3 lety

    but what about (and you mention it on one of your slides) the muted color palette ? with some warm muted colors and some cool muted colors ?

  • @lucyk2634
    @lucyk2634 Před 3 lety

    I cannot find your why is 12 season system a bs 🥺 And I was so interested... Please leave a link or something

  • @Parmesito
    @Parmesito Před 4 lety +3

    But what about the infinite number of course between red and green? Aren't those all neutral? Adding the same amount of pure green to pure red?

  • @nagrabagra4924
    @nagrabagra4924 Před 9 měsíci

    TY. This clarifies everything. I never knew much about skin tones and such, but have always known that some colors looked good on me and others didn't. I didn't understand the whys cause I've always just been busy with life. But I find it interesting and I love colors because I like to paint. I agree with you that it's all gotten too complicated and really just a down right headache. I like your simple approach to it. The old ways are usually the best lol! My confusion about my coloring has always been that when I resist the sun I'm super white. But I have no difficulty tanning and rarely burn, and I can get pretty dark. So I assumed that being so white meant that I was cool colored. But I noticed that warm greens look fabulous against my skin, and so does antique white or vanilla. Bright colors overwhelm me terribly. To add to my confusion I have central Hetero Chromia. The inner color ring around my pupil is hazel brown that is outlined in a muted soft yellow and bleeds streaks into the outer ring of a muted grayish blue. So depending on what I wear my eyes look green. I don't know what color to consider to bring out my eyes since there are so many colors in there. I have noticed that my eyes pop a brighter blue when I wear browns, I think the warm browns look best. I tried cool browns and I look sick and pale when I wear them. So thanks again. I will try the drape test and see if I can pin this down. It would make clothes shopping so much easier and I would feel more confident in my clothes if I know the right colors are making me look good.

  • @EmyN
    @EmyN Před rokem

    Thanks! Very informative

  • @6361kris
    @6361kris Před 4 lety +1

    With this system I would be a winter. Yet grey totally washes me out (if winters are suppossed to wear greys well). Blue grey, however is one of my best colors and the only grey I can wear well. Mistake to say winters can wear grey?

  • @kokosnuss8666
    @kokosnuss8666 Před 3 lety +3

    I feel like I am the exact 50:50 neutral person 😅🙈

  • @serinaadalenamielaelverlv7465

    Is a pure color ex orange muted if white is added or black i added. Is a color only muted if both black and white is added. I think pure colors on me is too bright but if the color is dark then I can wear it. If white is added it is not as great compared to darkend colors (I have high contrast. Dark hair and quite light skin and medium to dark eyes and warm undertone). Very grayed colors are too muted. Light and muted colors are like a death sentence. Orange is one of my best colors if it is not bright. I can go as far as an orange yellow. Pure yellow is not good. Do you think brightness is a gradient a kind of a degree of neutral to yellow or muted to bright?

  • @detsnumber1
    @detsnumber1 Před 6 lety

    Brilliant I have struggled with this being "neutral"for an age, I now am leaning towards the autumn and will re look and experiement to clarify for definite.

  • @EmyN
    @EmyN Před 10 měsíci

    This video is a must-see!

  • @jessicagomes4043
    @jessicagomes4043 Před 5 lety

    I’m a summer. So gold earrings, for example, won’t look that bad because they’re bright? I usually use silver but meh..

    • @eli4shawt
      @eli4shawt Před 5 lety

      I thought that with this system that summers were bright (high chrome) cool, which would mean that silver would indeed look better

  • @dianebaileymusicministries

    Thank you so much for such informational video.

  • @hayleewatt5175
    @hayleewatt5175 Před rokem

    So of both blue and yellow look pretty decent what does that mean? Did I do this wrong

  • @annap274
    @annap274 Před 5 lety +20

    Im not sick but i feel like i look green

    • @isabellas4120
      @isabellas4120 Před 5 lety +16

      Isn't that an olive skin tone? It isn't uncommon. It's natural. People sometimes don't know olive skin tones are a thing.

    • @michellechouinard4958
      @michellechouinard4958 Před 3 lety

      Then you're olive, which is a whole different animal... lol.

    • @KimberlyJ424
      @KimberlyJ424 Před 3 lety

      Same. In pictures I’m the only one who is clearly green.

  • @erikal85
    @erikal85 Před 4 lety

    Great video, Thanks !

  • @abbieclement
    @abbieclement Před 4 lety +2

    I'm so confused. I have an olive undertone, bright cold colours look good on me and I get lots of compliments but my skin also really glows in warm muted colours like peach and I get lots of compliments when I wear those as well. I literally CANNOT wear bright warm colours without looking sallow and sick, and soft cold coluors are ok-ish but wash me out.
    *Basically, summer, autumn= fantastic, winter= underwhelming and meh, spring= horrible.*
    I've watched so many of these videos but I still can't figure it out :/

    • @VanCrane
      @VanCrane Před 4 lety +3

      Lexie Clement Do you know Audrey Coyne on CZcams? She is a cool olive skin tone. I think olive skin can be cool or warm. It’s a mix of blue and yellow, but sometimes more yellow, sometimes more blue. And that’s why you can wear a little warm colors, but look better in cool tones. You have a both colors in your skin, but not really neutral, just a good mix 😉 I hope you understand what I mean, English is not my mother tongue 🙈

  • @Barbaramamato
    @Barbaramamato Před 6 lety +10

    Your presentation is a bit rigid when it comes to disallowing neutral skin tones. I have a skin tone that goes from an almost translucent pale without sun to a light tan or reddish if I recently tanned. Here is where we can both be accurate. One can have a more neutral zone skin undertone where others are clearly warm or cool. For the neutral zone skinned, it is possible to be able to wear both warms and cools (yet not together) and it's a flattering look.

    • @merriamstyle
      @merriamstyle  Před 5 lety +7

      It's definitely more difficult to tell the difference between warm and cool for people who are in this 'neutral zone'--I talk exactly about that in my 'What is Chroma' video! But still, the 'neutral zone' is actually a 'muted zone', and one would either be warm muted or cool muted. You may find that these people do look better in either warm muted colors or cool muted colors.

  • @marciebaker9816
    @marciebaker9816 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this video it really stopped my confusion!

  • @thewindsoffate
    @thewindsoffate Před rokem

    Fantastic and thorough explanation. I challenge anyone to believe there’s such a thing as a neutral undertone after watching this video 😉🙌💕