Personal Color Analysis — Find Your Season with AI | Vanikya

Upload a single portrait photograph and receive a magazine-grade personal colour analysis diagram. Vanikya charts undertone, value, chroma and contrast — the four axes a trained colourist uses — and returns your best twelve colours, six to avoid, and a side-by-side wardrobe try-on.

What the analysis reads

  • Undertone — warm, cool, or neutral, read directly from your skin in daylight.
  • Value — how light or deep your overall colouring sits on a five-step scale.
  • Chroma — soft, muted, clear, or bright saturation.
  • Contrast — the spread between your darkest hair / eye and lightest skin tones.

The twelve seasons

Every analysis classifies the subject into one of the twelve seasonal sub-types used by professional colour analysts: Soft Autumn, Warm Spring, Cool Summer, Deep Winter, Light Spring, True Autumn, Light Summer, Cool Winter, True Spring, Soft Summer, Deep Autumn, and Bright Winter.

How it works

  • Drop a clean daylight portrait — JPG, PNG, or WebP, up to 5 MB.
  • Optionally hint at a season if you already have a hypothesis; skip it to let the analysis decide.
  • Add subject notes (ethnicity, eye colour, hair colour) for a sharper undertone reading.
  • Pick Medium or High render quality. Generation takes roughly thirty seconds.
  • Download a single PNG, magazine-grade composition — save it to your phone for shopping, share to social, or use as a stylist brief.

Who it's for

  • Personal stylists building client mood boards backed by colour science.
  • Photographers picking wardrobe and backdrop that flatter the subject.
  • Shoppers carrying a colour cheat-sheet into every fitting room.
  • Content creators making share-worthy "what suits you" videos and posts.
  • Brand designers and beauty editors choosing palettes for shoots and campaigns.

Common questions

What is personal colour analysis? A method of identifying which clothing, makeup and accessory colours harmonise with your natural undertone, hair and eyes. The result is a personal palette you can reference when shopping, dressing or branding.

How accurate is the AI version? Vanikya reads the same four axes a trained analyst uses (undertone, value, chroma and contrast) directly from your photograph. Results are consistent when you upload a well-lit, neutral portrait.

What kind of photo works best? A front-facing daylight portrait, hair pulled back, neutral expression, no heavy filters, no heavy makeup. Avoid yellow indoor lighting and harsh shadows, which confuse undertone reading.

What can I do with the result? Save it to your phone, share to social, brief a stylist, or pin it to a mood board for a wedding palette, brand identity, or content shoot.