I’m just writing it here in hopes the developer wound see this. I like the app, it’s straightforward and easy, but it’d be even more user friendly if upon colour detection, the page tells me what family that colour belongs to (warm/cool, etc). Right now, I have to google the name up which is quite a trouble. Thanks!
Dear @cleo , thanks for your feedback. The app follows the most common workflow. The process starts with determining your color type, which you can do yourself on colorwise.me or with a color analyst of your choice. In the app, you select your color type, which activates the free palette with the 51 best colors for your color type. Then, in the app, use Camera Color Picker to test any color and see if it matches any of the colors in your palette. That would save you a lot of time compared to searching for the color’s family type. Hope it makes sense. Would love to hear you comments and thoughts.
I would love to see a more in depth explanation about how to use the colors in fashion. especially about the neutral and complementary colors. Am I supposed to match them with my best colors? What is the difference between the use of the best and complementary colors?
Also, if the app is thinking about expanding, kibbe body type identifier would be a great expension. Combine the colors and kibbe fuction to a personalised avatar to see what colors look like on body types would be amazing. A lot of work but it would be great.
Thanks for sharing these insights mate as I found it very much useful and informative.
I think the app needs to be refined. I put a few melanated people even some universally acknowledged to be warm toned like Halle Berry and it always says cool. It only changes to warm if they have blonde hair but the same eyes and skin. It’s coded that everyone with dark brown eyes and medium to dark hair belongs in cool seasons which is wrong. Plus you can’t zoom in to get a good color sample of someone with multi colored eyes. I put in Vanessa Williams and it would only pick up dark gray for her eye color.
Hi Selly,
Thank you for your feedback! It sounds like you’re referring to the AI color-analysis tool on Colorwise.me. Just to clarify, this tool isn’t part of the My Best Colors app, which takes a different approach to color analysis by offering a Color Analysis Kit for a more hands-on experience.
Regarding the accuracy of the AI tool, it’s based on a machine learning model trained on a large dataset. Unlike rule-based systems that classify individuals based on fixed criteria, this AI model identifies patterns in the data it has been trained on. While this allows for more nuanced analysis in many cases, it doesn’t guarantee 100% accuracy, as all AI tools have limitations. This is one of the reasons we developed the Color Analysis Kit—to offer a more customizable and precise method for users.
As for zooming in to pick accurate colors, the colorwise.me tool does support zooming! Since it’s a regular website, you can zoom in through your browser to get a closer look and pick colors with greater precision, especially for things like multi-colored eyes.
We truly appreciate your input, as it helps us identify areas for improvement in these tools. Let me know if you have other questions or concerns—I’d be happy to help!
Hi, everyone!
I discovered the My Best Colors app last week, and it has been incredibly helpful over the past few days. However, I’ve noticed a few areas where I think the app could be further improved:
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I was excited to see that makeup swatches are included, but it would be great if we could also see our best blush colors. That seems to be the only type of makeup missing.
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Similarly, I think it would be awesome to have a “best hair colors” category. It would be really useful to show a color swatch to a hairstylist for reference.
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I’m not sure if this is possible, but some textures, especially satin or metallic, might need an update. It can be hard to visualize how certain colors—especially those used in jewelry—would look in real life without a reflective texture.
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Lastly, are there any plans to translate the app into different languages? While the app is quite intuitive and doesn’t rely on a lot of text, it would be fantastic for non-English speakers to fully experience it, especially when it comes to understanding the reasoning behind each season/color.
Thank you for all your hard work on the app!
@Lulil, great suggestions — thank you for taking the time to share them!
Some of these requests, like blush color recommendations and support for more languages, are already in our backlog. We’ll see what we can do.