Same here!!! I'm also super clumsy. My best white is the stark white, and it is rare for me to go to a restaurant that is not casual. If I end up in a restaurant wearing a white top, I will usually bite the bullet and make myself a "bib" with a napkin 😆 I guess I've reached the age when I care more about my shirt than about my embarrassment. If I were to go to a fancy restaurant, I'd be careful of what I order (stuff that doesn't spill). Lol
It’s so strange how white plus grey starts to look warm (when seen on its own). I’ve noticed the same with pink and blue, the more grey added, the more warm they seem to appear to me. I’d call them ‘mardy’, like a mardy pink 😄
Great video, I have been professionally typed as a Deep Winter too! Could you show some examples of not so dark colours? I find blues, reds, greens can be tricky when not super dark as the undertone can be tricky to determine! But I do find those less dark shades look amazing on us!
@@Vibrations_1111 Sure, look for any white shade (white plus added black). Think of a light Lead. You could think of your white as a smoke white also, but I prefer to think of it as a stone white because smokiness may suggest a lower intensity than Deeps are.
Where does true white sit in palette? What about white cream vs yellow cream? If the yellow cream is spring,what is white cream? I've always understood grey as black and white combined... what's the difference between "black white"/stone , and grey whites/soft white, milk white? Wouldn't milk white be slightly yellow/cream like dairy? Or is it a different milk? Where would a pink white fall? Light summer?
@@ingridpear1882 True White is going to be better for True Cools-Cool Winters. A whiter cream will be best for Light Springs only if not too yellow. A white plus black added is a shade. A white plus grey added is a tone, less intense. Milk white is a fully cool white, no yellow in it. A whiter pink pastel is for Lights Springs and Light Summers - bubblegum pinks, baby pinks etc.
@@thecolorconsultant Thank you very much ❤️. They all make sense, except,I'm still having a little difficulty understanding the black/grey white. Does the grey white have less black or more added to make it less intense? Is it a certain shade of black mixed with white that makes grey/tone? Or the tint of white it's added to? How do you make grey? I've heard that summer whites are never true grey,but rather slightly colored grey ie. blue or purple grey. Does that affect the lack of intensity ?
Grey can have added black to add intensity and white added to make a lighter tint. Although you don't need black to create grey. Two complementary colors mixed can create a neutral grey. You won´t find grey itself in the True Summer palette, but instead tones of grey. Colors plus added grey. Like a blue-grey or purple-grey.
It' funny. I always ask myself:"Why is she wearing white", if she is someone who says in palette there is no white not should use white. But it really is that it looks like white if someone uses their own whites...
@bethanyann1060 As the color consultant states pastels and icy colors are uniquely different. With pastels, white is mixed into a color base until it's the right SOFTNESS and LIGHTNESS, but think of icy colors as mixing DOTS of color into a PURE WHITE BASE. For example, mixing 95 percent pure white and about 5 percent of a saturated blue pigment will create a whitish color with a VISIBLE blue undertone.
Can you do makeup recommendations for each season?
Yes! Yes! ❤
I second this!
White worries me as a messy eater , but glad to know
@@zziggy808 Consider wearing it in a hat and shawl you don't have on at the dinner table 😄.
Same here!!! I'm also super clumsy. My best white is the stark white, and it is rare for me to go to a restaurant that is not casual. If I end up in a restaurant wearing a white top, I will usually bite the bullet and make myself a "bib" with a napkin 😆 I guess I've reached the age when I care more about my shirt than about my embarrassment. If I were to go to a fancy restaurant, I'd be careful of what I order (stuff that doesn't spill). Lol
It’s so strange how white plus grey starts to look warm (when seen on its own). I’ve noticed the same with pink and blue, the more grey added, the more warm they seem to appear to me. I’d call them ‘mardy’, like a mardy pink 😄
In effect , heavy cream does not look heavy on the right person 😊
Great video!! This was so informative. Your visual comparisons were really helpful.
Great video, I have been professionally typed as a Deep Winter too! Could you show some examples of not so dark colours? I find blues, reds, greens can be tricky when not super dark as the undertone can be tricky to determine! But I do find those less dark shades look amazing on us!
LOVEEE
Grey white
I love these videos. Give me colour, throw it all at me!
Ivory is my favorite 😊
Thank you. This was very informative.
i know theres difference in navys , can u so a video in navy???
@@aprilbatley6738 Sure!
Are the are other names for stone white?
@@Vibrations_1111 Sure, look for any white shade (white plus added black). Think of a light Lead. You could think of your white as a smoke white also, but I prefer to think of it as a stone white because smokiness may suggest a lower intensity than Deeps are.
Where does true white sit in palette?
What about white cream vs yellow cream? If the yellow cream is spring,what is white cream?
I've always understood grey as black and white combined... what's the difference between "black white"/stone , and grey whites/soft white, milk white?
Wouldn't milk white be slightly yellow/cream like dairy? Or is it a different milk?
Where would a pink white fall? Light summer?
@@ingridpear1882 True White is going to be better for True Cools-Cool Winters. A whiter cream will be best for Light Springs only if not too yellow. A white plus black added is a shade. A white plus grey added is a tone, less intense. Milk white is a fully cool white, no yellow in it. A whiter pink pastel is for Lights Springs and Light Summers - bubblegum pinks, baby pinks etc.
@@thecolorconsultant Thank you very much ❤️. They all make sense, except,I'm still having a little difficulty understanding the black/grey white. Does the grey white have less black or more added to make it less intense? Is it a certain shade of black mixed with white that makes grey/tone? Or the tint of white it's added to? How do you make grey? I've heard that summer whites are never true grey,but rather slightly colored grey ie. blue or purple grey. Does that affect the lack of intensity ?
Grey can have added black to add intensity and white added to make a lighter tint. Although you don't need black to create grey. Two complementary colors mixed can create a neutral grey. You won´t find grey itself in the True Summer palette, but instead tones of grey. Colors plus added grey. Like a blue-grey or purple-grey.
@@thecolorconsultant Thank you, that's clarifying.
It' funny. I always ask myself:"Why is she wearing white", if she is someone who says in palette there is no white not should use white. But it really is that it looks like white if someone uses their own whites...
What makes a color a pastel?
Pastels have a significant amount of white versus icy colors. They are soft, low saturation, and very light.
@@thecolorconsultant Thanks. And what makes a color icy?
@bethanyann1060 As the color consultant states pastels and icy colors are uniquely different. With pastels, white is mixed into a color base until it's the right SOFTNESS and LIGHTNESS, but think of icy colors as mixing DOTS of color into a PURE WHITE BASE. For example, mixing 95 percent pure white and about 5 percent of a saturated blue pigment will create a whitish color with a VISIBLE blue undertone.
@@TravelinArtBook Thank you!
❤❤❤