-
New Zealand may join Australia-Fiji defence pact: PM Luxon
-
All Blacks make five changes for Italy Nations Championship clash
-
Fly-half Meredith to make Australia debut against France
-
Western Europe records its hottest June as heatwaves surge: EU monitor
-
US, Iran trade new strikes in fight over Hormuz strait
-
Fashion's mystery man Margiela sells off his archives
-
Modi eyes 'historic' chance to secure Australian uranium
-
Nuclear test-scarred Marshall Islands criticises China missile
-
US crackdown on top AI fuels open-source surge
-
Chip titan SK hynix to set price for mega US listing
-
EU moves closer to kicking kids off social media
-
Crude extends rally as US-Iran flare-up rocks peace hopes
-
Protecting the protectors: racing to save Philippine mangroves
-
Democrat accused of rape exits key US Senate race
-
Expanded World Cup; same old story as Europe dominates quarter-finals
-
Japan student Ito keeps place against Ireland as Jones returns
-
Morocco's Saibari out of France World Cup quarter-final
-
Belgium bid to crack Spain's ironclad defence in World Cup quarter-final
-
Trump orders new strikes on Iran over attacks on shipping in Hormuz
-
US man sentenced after swapping 17th century manuscript
-
PSG's Lee set to join Atletico Madrid
-
US launches new strikes on Iran after Trump vows to hit 'hard'
-
Iran plays with fire, but calculates Trump will hold back
-
Taylor Swift fans pay $25 for garbage from outside wedding
-
Oil surges, stocks slide as Trump says Iran ceasefire over
-
After quakes, Venezuelans fear losing damaged homes
-
Meta to build $9 billion data center in western Canada
-
PSG's Lee set to join Athletico
-
Rogers backs Kane to outshine Haaland in World Cup showdown
-
Erdogan gave pistols to NATO leaders, Starmer says
-
Some US Fed officials considered June rate hike on war fallout
-
Nocera Expands Diversified Technology Strategy With Binding Agreement to Acquire an Equity Interest in INERGX, an Integrated Energy Storage and Power Platform for AI, Defense and Mission-Critical Demand
-
UN launches appeal for nearly $300 mn in Venezuela quake relief
-
China sends nuclear missile message as US looks elsewhere
-
US to remove Syria from terror blacklist, in new boost to Sharaa
-
Justin Bieber added to 11-minute World Cup final halftime show
-
Court rejects Trump request to restore his name to Kennedy Center
-
Fery targets Wimbledon final birthday present after royal seal of approval
-
MLB pitching great Verlander to retire after 2026 season
-
Egypt file complaint against referee after World Cup exit
-
Artificial cloud brightening could tame El Nino, but with risks: study
-
Women's semi-finalists in uncharted territory at Wimbledon
-
Shocked and shaken, Venezuela quake survivors get psychological help
-
US man jailed after swapping 17th century manuscript
-
France, Morocco kick off blockbuster World Cup quarter-finals
-
UN maritime head urges halt to Hormuz transit to protect seafarers
-
Amorim hails 'ambitious' AC Milan, promises to learn Italian
-
Trump skips new Air Force One on return from Turkey NATO summit
-
Cancer survivor Traeen takes the long road to Tour yellow
-
New York building that buckled now 'stable,' says mayor
WhatColorsSuitMe.com Launches AI Personal Colour Analysis From a Single Selfie
WhatColorsSuitMe.com uses image analysis to deliver instant seasonal colour palette recommendations - Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter - based on a user's hair, eye, and skin colouring.
LOS ANGELES, CA / ACCESS Newswire / June 30, 2026 / WhatColorsSuitMe.com today launched an AI personal color analysis platform that delivers seasonal palette recommendations from a single selfie. The platform is operated by Real Tested Inc. and applies image analysis to hair, eye, and skin coloration before mapping the user to one of the 12 classic seasonal subtypes within the Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter framework.
The system asks for a front-facing photo taken in natural light against a neutral background, with specific guidance to avoid common pitfalls. Users should remove makeup, ensure even lighting without shadows across the face, and avoid filters or heavy editing. The platform samples pixel data from the cheek, forehead, lip, iris, and hair zones, then computes undertone, value, and chroma. The output is a primary season, a sub-season such as True Winter, Bright Spring, or Soft Autumn, and a 36-color personal palette rendered as a downloadable PNG showing exact hex codes for digital reference.
Each palette includes a wardrobe-pairing view showing which neutrals to anchor on, a metals view covering silver, gold, rose gold, and mixed metallics, and a hair-color recommendation calibrated to the user's natural value range with visual swatches. The makeup module recommends foundation undertones, lipstick families like cool-toned nudes for Summer or warm terracottas for Autumn, and eyeshadow palettes matched to the sub-season result. The launch dataset is built on more than 25,000 manually-labeled color-draping reference photographs and accepts inputs in 14 languages. A quiz-only fallback path is offered for users unable to supply a usable photo.
Professional color draping consultations typically cost $150 to $500 per session in the United States and require in-person studio visits under controlled lighting. AI color analysis has emerged as a high-volume search category in 2026 as consumers test ChatGPT and similar tools against the same question, with mixed results that often fail to distinguish a True Winter from a Deep Winter or a Bright Spring from a Light Spring. WhatColorsSuitMe.com addresses that gap by training on labeled draping photographs rather than text prompts and by publishing the sub-season distinction visibly in every result. Unlike competing tools that stop at a primary season, this platform emphasizes the 12-subtype framework, with each subtype carrying distinct color characteristics and palette ranges.
"Most AI color tools tell you that you are a Winter and stop there," said the editorial lead at WhatColorsSuitMe.com. "Winter is four different palettes. Getting the sub-season right is the difference between a wardrobe that works and a wardrobe full of items that almost work."
FAQ
How do I take the best photo for accurate analysis?
Upload a front-facing selfie in even natural light, ideally near a window on an overcast day or in soft outdoor shade. Use a neutral background, remove makeup, and avoid filters or editing. Position your face straight to the camera without tilting, and ensure your hair is pulled back from your face so the system can sample cheek and forehead zones clearly. Poor lighting, heavy shadows, or angled poses are the most common reasons for suboptimal results.
What makes the 12-subseason approach different from basic seasonal analysis?
The 12-subtype framework divides each of the four seasons into three subtypes that capture finer gradations of undertone, value, and chroma. Deep Autumn differs from Soft Autumn in saturation and darkness; True Winter differs from Bright Winter in chroma. This granularity allows the platform to return a palette that matches your specific coloration rather than a broad seasonal bucket that may include colors outside your range.
How accurate is this compared to professional color draping?
Testing against in-person draping results shows match rates above 85 percent for users who follow photo guidelines. The system excels at identifying primary and sub-season placement when input quality is high. In-person draping retains an edge for borderline cases between two sub-seasons, since a trained colorist can iterate fabric swatches under controlled lighting in ways that single-photo analysis cannot replicate.
More information is available at whatcolorssuitme.com.
About WhatColorsSuitMe.com
WhatColorsSuitMe.com is an AI personal-colour-analysis application that delivers instant seasonal palette recommendations from a single selfie, applying the four-season and twelve-season analysis systems. The platform provides personalised palettes of approximately 30 colours alongside clothing, makeup, and accessory guidance, with educational pages on the underlying frameworks. Operated by Real Tested Inc.
About Justin Hartfield
Justin Hartfield is the co-founder of Weedmaps and the founder of Real Tested Inc., a digital media company that builds independent, editorially driven consumer directories across cannabis, health, wellness, and lifestyle categories. Real Tested Inc. operates a portfolio of consumer information platforms serving millions of readers worldwide.
Contact Info
Company: Real Tested Inc.
Email: [email protected]
Phone: +1(833) 365-5250
SOURCE: Real Tested Inc
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
F.Schneider--AMWN