What is Deep Winter?
Deep Winter: Deep Winter is the dark cool season in the 12-season color analysis system. It sits between Deep Autumn and True Winter, so its best colors are dark, cool-neutral, saturated, and sharper than earth tones.
Seasonal color analysis uses color dimensions such as hue, value, and chroma. Those dimensions are part of formal color notation systems such as Munsell, then translated by analysts into the practical language of warm vs cool, light vs deep, and soft vs bright.
The label is useful only if it changes real choices. A good Deep Winter result should make shirts, makeup, hair color, jewelry, and neutrals easier to repeat.
Deep Winter color dimensions
Deep Winter is deep first and cool second. The palette needs darkness before pure coolness. If a color is cool but pale, it can wash the face out. If it is dark but warm and muddy, it usually belongs to Autumn.
| Dimension | Deep Winter | What to test |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | Cool-neutral. Deep Winter is cooler than Deep Autumn, but it can borrow a small amount of warmth through depth. | Compare warm and cool versions of the same color near the face. |
| Value | Deep. Darkness is the main trait, with strong support from black, navy, burgundy, pine, and espresso-like colors. | Compare light, medium, and deep drapes without changing temperature. |
| Chroma | Clear to slightly rich. Deep Winter is clearer than Autumn, but less electric than Bright Winter. | Compare muted and clear versions of a similar hue. |
| Contrast | Medium-high to high contrast. The face usually improves with dark framing and crisp light accents. | Watch whether the face improves with tonal styling or stronger contrast. |
Deep Winter compared with neighboring seasons
| Test | Deep Winter | Cooler, warmer, lighter, or deeper neighbor | What usually fails first |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | Cool-neutral | Deep Autumn is warmer | True Winter is cooler |
| Value | Deep | True Winter is cleaner | Bright Spring is lighter |
| Chroma | Clear to rich | Deep Autumn is softer | Bright Winter is brighter |
| Best test color | Burgundy, pine, black | Camel usually fails | Icy pastels can be weak |
How to tell if you are Deep Winter
You identify Deep Winter by drape response, not by one feature. Skin, hair, and eyes matter, but the deciding evidence is how controlled colors change the face.
Skin undertone signals
Deep Winter skin can be light, medium, olive, brown, or deep. The useful signal is whether black, pine, burgundy, and sapphire add definition without making the skin look yellow or tired.
Surface redness, tanning, foundation, and phone white balance can distort undertone. Test on clean skin in indirect daylight, with dyed hair pulled away if the color changes your natural contrast.
Hair color signals
Hair often reads dark brown, black-brown, black, cool espresso, or silver-black. There is usually enough depth for dark clothing to look intentional.
Natural hair is more useful than a current dye job. If your hair is colored, focus on whether the right palette makes the skin clearer before judging whether the hair matches.
Eye color signals
Eyes are often dark brown, black-brown, deep hazel, cool green, or icy blue. The overall effect usually has weight and contrast.
Eye color is supporting evidence. The same blue, brown, green, or hazel eye can appear in several seasons, so use the eye response to confirm the drape result rather than choose the result.
Common confusion seasons
Deep Winter is most often confused with Deep Autumn, True Winter, and Bright Winter. Test warmth first, then clarity.
- Deep Winter vs True Winter: True Winter is cooler and cleaner. Deep Winter keeps more dark richness and often looks better in burgundy, pine, and sapphire than in icy brights alone.
- Deep Winter vs Deep Autumn: Deep Autumn is warmer and earthier. Deep Winter looks sharper in black, cool burgundy, pine, and sapphire than in camel, mustard, or warm olive.
- Deep Winter vs Bright Winter: Bright Winter is brighter, icier, and more electric. Deep Winter needs more darkness and steadier cool structure.
The Deep Winter color palette with hex codes
The Deep Winter palette works when every color respects the same temperature, value, and chroma pattern. Hex codes are digital approximations. Use them for shopping, mood boards, and comparison, not as a replacement for fabric draping.
Pure White
#FFFFFF
A crisp light accent that supports dark contrast.
Black
#000000
A core neutral for tailoring, outerwear, and eye definition.
Blue Red
#B00030
A cool red that is stronger than rose and cleaner than brick.
Cranberry
#8A1538
A deep red-pink that works for lips, knits, and evening wear.
Burgundy
#5B1235
A signature dark color because it has depth and coolness.
Pine Green
#004B3C
A dark green that avoids Autumn olive warmth.
Emerald
#006B54
A saturated green that keeps the palette from looking too heavy.
Royal Navy
#102A56
A strong neutral for suits, coats, denim, and bags.
Sapphire
#0F52BA
A blue that adds Winter clarity without becoming electric.
Cool Espresso
#2F241F
A very dark brown direction that stays cooler than Autumn chocolate.
Charcoal
#2A2D34
A softer dark neutral when black feels too stark.
Compare this palette with the complete 12-season chart entry for Deep Winter before shopping from a screenshot. Palette cards vary by analyst and printing method.
How to test the Deep Winter palette
The best home test for Deep Winter is a controlled fabric comparison. Use clean skin, indirect daylight, a plain background, and two colors that differ by one dimension at a time.
Start with temperature. Hold one likely Deep Winter color near the face, then hold the closest opposite from a neighboring season. Watch the skin around the mouth, nose, under-eyes, and jawline. The better color usually makes those areas look calmer and more defined.
Test value second. If the palette is too light, the face can look unsupported. If it is too dark, the fabric may arrive before the person. The right value creates structure without forcing you to add heavy makeup.
Test chroma last. Clear colors can make a soft season look tired because the fabric is louder than the face. Muted colors can make a bright season look dusty. The right chroma makes the eye color, skin, and hair look connected.
Do not type yourself from a single good shirt. One shirt can work because of neckline, contrast, texture, or makeup. A season result should repeat across several fabric colors, lipstick families, metals, and neutrals.
Keep brief notes while you test. Write down which colors reduce shadows, which colors create redness, and which colors make the fabric more noticeable than your face.
If the test stays close after several rounds, book a professional draping session. Borderline results are normal, especially between adjacent seasons that share temperature, value, or chroma.
What to wear as Deep Winter
Deep Winter outfits work best when tops, bottoms, neutrals, and accessories repeat the palette instead of fighting it. Start with colors near the face, then fix shoes, bags, and outerwear.
Choose black, pure white, cranberry, burgundy, pine, emerald, royal navy, sapphire, and charcoal.
Use black, charcoal, royal navy, burgundy, pine, or cool espresso. Keep contrast deliberate.
Neutrals
The best neutrals are black, pure white, charcoal, royal navy, cool espresso, and deep gray.
Worst colors to avoid
Avoid camel, mustard, orange, warm beige, dusty sage, muted peach, light tan, and low-contrast muddy colors.
Jewelry and metals
Silver, white gold, platinum, gunmetal, and high-shine blackened metal usually work well. Very yellow gold can look warm.
Deep Winter makeup
Deep Winter makeup should repeat the palette at a smaller scale. The most common mistake is wearing a technically pretty color that belongs to a neighboring season.
Foundation undertone
Foundation usually needs neutral-cool, olive-cool, cool brown, or balanced neutral direction. Avoid golden peach bases.
Lipstick
Use cranberry, blue-red, burgundy, wine, deep berry, cool plum, and clear rose. Skip terracotta and warm caramel nude.
Eyeshadow and liner
Eyeshadow works in charcoal, black-brown, navy, pine, burgundy, silver, and cool taupe. Black mascara usually fits.
Blush
Choose berry, cool rose, plum rose, or deep raspberry with no peach or bronze cast.
Deep Winter hair color
Hair color affects how easy the palette is to wear. The best hair direction supports your natural temperature, depth, and contrast instead of creating a second, competing palette around the face.
Best natural shades
The best natural direction is dark ash brown, cool espresso, black-brown, black, silver-black, or cool gray.
Best dye options
Good dye options include cool dark brunette, espresso gloss, soft black, blue-black, and deep cool brown.
Hair colors to avoid
Avoid caramel balayage, copper, golden brown, warm chestnut, orange-red, and yellow blonde highlights near the face.
Celebrity examples are not listed here
This guide does not list celebrities as Deep Winter unless there is a public professional result to cite. Most celebrity season lists online are visual guesses based on edited photos, red-carpet lighting, makeup, hair color, and styling choices.
Use public figures only as loose visual references. For your own result, controlled draping is more reliable than matching yourself to someone with a similar hair color.
Deep Winter vs adjacent seasons
Adjacent seasons share at least one color dimension. The fastest comparison is to test the one dimension that changes: temperature, value, or chroma.
Deep Winter vs True Winter
True Winter is cooler and cleaner. Deep Winter keeps more dark richness and often looks better in burgundy, pine, and sapphire than in icy brights alone.
Deep Winter vs Deep Autumn
Deep Autumn is warmer and earthier. Deep Winter looks sharper in black, cool burgundy, pine, and sapphire than in camel, mustard, or warm olive.
Deep Winter vs Bright Winter
Bright Winter is brighter, icier, and more electric. Deep Winter needs more darkness and steadier cool structure.
Get a professional color analysis
A self-test can narrow your season, but a trained analyst can compare controlled drapes and explain the exact reason one palette works better than another. That matters most when you are stuck between adjacent seasons.
Start with the free color analysis quiz, then browse the color analyst directory. City guides are live for major markets including Vancouver, New York, and Los Angeles.