Color Analysis · outcome
AI Color Analysis for Outfit & Wardrobe Colors
The shirt, dress, jacket, and accessory colors that flatter your natural coloring.
About this
Most personal-color-analysis searches come from one practical problem: standing in front of a closet (or in a fitting room) and not knowing whether a color works. Vanikya's AI color analysis solves that with a wardrobe-focused palette — twelve clothing-color recommendations and six to avoid, presented as a take-with-you reference.
Save it to your phone, pull it up in fitting rooms, screenshot it for your stylist, or share it with a partner who shops for you. The palette is portable and product-agnostic — it tells you the color family, not which specific brand to buy from.
What you get
- Wardrobe palette diagram — Twelve harmonising clothing colors and six to avoid, presented as a clean magazine-grade diagram you can save to your phone.
- Color category guidance — Which colors work for shirts vs jackets vs accessories — different garments sit at different distances from the face, which changes how much each color affects perception.
- Try-on visualization — See your face rendered wearing your best and worst clothing colors side by side, so the recommendation is concrete.
How to spot it
- Save the palette PNG to your phone. Pull it up while shopping.
- Match the color family, not the exact shade — terracotta-family covers a range of warm muted oranges.
- Colors closest to the face (shirts, scarves, jewelry) matter most. Lower-body colors (pants, shoes) have less impact.
- Use the avoid list when shopping returns — if a garment isn't flattering and you can't tell why, check whether it's in the avoid palette.
Common questions
Does this cover the colors I should wear for work vs casual?
The analysis covers the colors that harmonise with you across any context. Work-vs-casual is a styling choice (formality, fit, accessorising), not a color choice — the same harmonising palette works for both.
What about black? Everyone wears black.
Black is universally worn but not universally flattering. Cool seasons (Cool Summer, Cool Winter, Deep Winter, Bright Winter) wear black well. Warm seasons (Warm Spring, True Autumn, Soft Autumn) often look better in cocoa brown, deep navy, or charcoal — same wardrobe role with less visual conflict.
Can I share this with a personal stylist?
Yes — the saved PNG is a portable brief. Many users send it to their stylist or shopping service as a starting reference document.