Contrast – both colour contrast and value contrast can be quite tricky concepts to grasp. Once you see it you can’t go back, but learning to see what is and isn’t working and understanding why can sometimes take a little time.
I’ve explained how to figure out your contrast levels in this post – with my 3 easy steps.
Once you know your value contrast and colour contrast levels, you’re ready to get dressed.
To give you some guidance, I showed you examples of a high value contrast, low colour contrast style icon Princess Mary here.
So here are some further examples of dressing to your ideal value and also contrast levels, illustrated by a few celebrities.
Finding Your Ideal Value and Contrast Levels
Here is Sharon Stone – who has an overall light value (she has light hair and skin and eyes).
Right: correct value contrast
When she’s wearing a high value contrast with the dark pants and light top, the outfit is obvious and wears her. But when she’s wearing an overall light value outfit, there is harmony with her colouring and the outfit.
Now here is Reece Witherspoon. Again she has an overall light value. You can see that when she’s wearing the dark outfit on the left, the outfit dominates her, and if weren’t for the black sunglasses, would look really bad, as the black sunglasses help to add some depth to her face.
Now when you compare her to the photo on the right where she’s wearing a medium blue jean and light top, that relates much more to her natural value and contrast level, she looks so much more balanced.
Here is Jennifer Aniston, who has a medium light overall value, and a medium low value contrast.
You can see that the black dress wears her, the value is way too dark. But when she’s wearing the other outfits, they create harmony with her colouring as they are overall medium light in value and low-medium value contrast.
Here is Reece Witherspoon again. This time in two similar sized patterns, but one is high value contrast, the other high colour contrast.
Which looks better and why? The high colour contrast (but lower value contrast) print on the right, as it’s in tune with her colour contrast dominant colouring and natural value contrast levels. The high value contrast navy and white print wears her, as there is nothing about it that relates to her value contrast.
Colour contrast dominant people, like, Reece Witherspoon, Blake Lively, Emma Stone, all look better wearing at least one colour (often a couple of colours or more).
When they just wear neutral outfits, they look bland, and their clothes don’t harmonise with their colouring.
Let’s look at colour contrast again. Here Courtney Cox, who is “neutral plus 1 colour” ideally in her colour contrast wears two very different dresses.
The one on the left is high colour contrast, and what you see is the dress, not her face. The dress on the right is a deeper value (in tune with her own deeper value) and is just one colour at a time, which is what is ideally suited to her.
Let’s just double back on Courtney Cox’s value contrast. She has light skin and dark hair, which makes her high value contrast. This is why she is value contrast dominant and can more easily wear either a neutral palette (even though she has blue eyes, and looks great in neutral plus one colour) like black and white as it reflects her dominant characteristics.
This is why the outfit on the left looks kind of “blah” and uninspiring. It’s not high value contrast enough for her. She has the colouring that works so well with black and dark/deep colours, which is why she can wear the head to toe black and look good, unlike all the other light value celebrities I’ve already featured here. And this is why the black and white print top on the right works for her, it is her ideal value contrast.
Emma Stone has natural colour contrast. It’s what we see first (particularly when she has her hair dyed red). So when she removes all colour from her outfit (such as the head to toe black outfit) it wears her. The only saving grace of this outfit is her fabulous signature hair coloured handbag (which you can see works so well). In fact, wearing a bag in your hair colour is a fabulous way of repeating that element of your colouring in any outfit.
On the right we have a blue jacket. This is a medium value, which works much better than the deep value of the black outfit on the left. Plus she’s added colour which is important as she is colour contrast dominant, and always looks better when she has some colour in her outfit. I just wish she’d chosen a warm rather than cool pink for her shoes.
Lesson’s learned here?
Ideally wear your right value and colour contrast. But even if you just wear an outfit in a value that is similar to your dominant value (light, medium, or deep) your outfits will look more stylish as they relate and harmonise with your natural beauty.
If you want my professional opinion on your best contrast levels, why not join my 7 Steps to Style program which includes colour analysis, body shape analysis and direct input from me on what your ideal value and contrast levels are. Find out more here.
More Posts on Contrast to Help You Get Yours Right
Discover the 4 Nifty Low Colour Contrast Dressing Tricks Used by Princess Mary
9 Real Life Examples of Dressing to Your Contrast
Are You Colour Contrast or Value Contrast Dominant
The Value of Value Contrast and Using it to Create Stunning Outfits
How to Work With Your Contrast – Low Contrast
What Exactly is Low Value Contrast
Getting Your Value Contrast Levels Right
How to Work with Your Contrast – Medium Contrast
How to Wear Medium Value Colours When You are High Contrast
How to Work with Your Contrast -High Contrast
How Anyone Can Wear a High Contrast Print
What Exactly is Medium-High Value Contrast?