💋 Color Match Tool
Choose your skin depth and undertone to see curated lipstick and blush shade families that tend to flatter that combination — a starting point for your next shade shopping trip.
💄 Match Your Shades
What is the Color Match Tool?
It takes two things about your complexion — how deep it is, and whether it leans cool, warm, or neutral — and returns curated lipstick and blush shade families that generally flatter that combination, along with a short note on why they work.
Use it as a starting point when shopping for a new lipstick or blush, when you're not sure why a shade you liked in the ad doesn't look the same on you, or simply to explore shade families you haven't tried yet. Lighting and personal chemistry still matter, so treat these as a guide and swatch before you buy where you can.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know my skin undertone?
Look at the veins on the inside of your wrist in natural light: bluish or purple veins usually mean a cool undertone, greenish veins usually mean a warm undertone, and a mix of both — or trouble telling — usually means a neutral undertone. Jewelry can help too: if silver flatters you more than gold, you likely lean cool; if gold flatters you more, you likely lean warm.
What's the difference between skin depth and undertone?
Depth describes how light or dark your skin is overall — fair, light, medium, tan, or deep. Undertone describes the underlying hue beneath that depth — cool, warm, or neutral. Two people can share the same depth but have completely different undertones, which is why shade matching needs both.
Why do the same lipstick shade look different on different people?
A shade's pigments interact with your skin's own undertone, so a coral that looks peachy-warm on warm skin can look slightly orange on cool skin. Matching the shade family to your undertone — rather than just picking a popular color — is what makes it look natural rather than off.
Should my blush match my lipstick exactly?
Not exactly, but they should come from a harmonious shade family. Pairing a cool berry lipstick with a cool-toned blush (rather than a warm peach blush) keeps the whole look cohesive, even if the two products aren't identical shades.