Orange is not my color (2/3)
The logic behind the colors that look good on us and how to get away with those that don’t. Part 2: INTENSITY
This is the continuation of an article in three parts. Read part 1 here, which covers value. Part 3 will cover hue.
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Intensity
An intense color can be thought of a color in its purest state, containing the greatest amount of “pigment”. Add black or white to it, and shades and tints are created. These retain a certain amount of intensity but are softer to the eye. Add grey and they become desaturated. These are the least intense of them.
Though humans are rarely born with Crayola-like colors on, we do display a certain range of intensity. The beautiful Humanae project by Angélica Dass is an eye-opener in terms of the wide spectrum of human skintone. If we look at these photographs and put value (how light or dark a color is) and hue (is it cooler, warmer?) to the side for a second, we can notice how some people display more muted tones while others have are more intense cast to them. If we pay attention, our eyes, hair, lips and even cheeks are also vary in their brightness.
So what do we look better in? The same way we dealt with light-dark contrast in part 1: the secret is in matching that intensity.
Those born with vivid blue eyes, orange hair or rich honey skin tone will harmonise with equally bright colors. Similarly, soft tones will be most flattering for those with grey-green eyes, ash blonde beards or naturally muted skintones.
Of course, if we alter our natural colors and make them louder by dying our hair in The Little Mermaid’s shade of red or using colored lenses — is that even still a thing? — we will consequently be able to handle striking colors on our clothes and accessories.
One exception: high light-dark contrast people look lovely in bold colors too!
Black hair against light skin. Dark skin against milky teeth. Independently of the color intensity of their features, those of sharp light-dark contrast also look great in colors that pop. Though light-dark contrast and color intensity are two different things, both are highly stimulating for the eye and hence harmonise well together.
What happens when intensity doesn’t match
Just like light-dark contrast, color intensity is relative. The intensity of an individual color matters less than its difference in intensity with the colors around it. When we maintain a similar vividness all around, colors not only harmonise with each other but are also more stable. When there are differences, shifts start to happen.
If we have higher intensity naturally (or artificially) and wear muted clothes, our intensity will appear even higher, while our clothes will be harder to remember. That’s something we might want or not — think red hair appearing even redder vs pink skin appearing even pinker.
It is more problematic if we are muted and wear bright colors: we will look even more muted (or sick) and our clothes will steal the show.
That is why it’s usually simpler to embrace the quality of our intensity rather than pushing for the opposite.
I don’t care, I still want it
You might have low intensity features but vivid colors bring you joy and you cannot imagine a closet without them. Or you might be born with more intense colors but hate drawing attention to yourself with strong colors. A few tips for both scenarios:
Low intensity who want to wear vivid colors
- Place the bold color away from your face.
- Wear one vibrant color combined with quieter tones instead of various vibrant hues at once. The higher number of vivid hues you wear, the more stimulating the result and the further the face will draw back.
- If you wear make-up, wear it in more vivid tones. Adding light-dark contrast to your features can also help compensate for clothing that is overly vivid. Or go crazy and dye your hair in a color that pops.
- If you wear glasses, use a more saturated frame to bring the attention back to the face.
High intensity who want to wear muted colors
- Combine muted with intense or consider including a splash of color on top of your muted colors: a bag, a belt, a scarf.
- Alternatively, if the intensity is very high and/or there is enough light-dark contrast present, wear black and white instead. It remains powerful, yet not colorful.
- Or… just go for it. And maybe consider using values and hues that relate to you. Two out of three is still pretty good.