Wonderful video! As always, very specific and knowledgeable. Thank you! And Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you! It’s been great to find your channel in 2024
This made sense. I have a friend who is absolutely addicted to wearing black, she won't let go of it no matter what. She looks older than she is. I've no way of telling her that, don't feel comfortable with the idea, as I see how much she loves black. In the rare occasions when she wears beige she looks radiant.
I know many women who are obsessed with black for many reasons. I can´t blame them! One of the girls in my class in 9th grade was only wearing black clothes, oversized shirts and pants until I asked her why she was doing it. Even though she was a bright chroma with black eyes and long black hair and looked good in black I suggested to go shopping with her to find more colors for her and clothing that would show her beautiful body shape. She agreed and we found bright colors for her like a medium blue crop top that she was brave enough to wear to school the next day. People were shocked to see her in another color and all eyes were on her for days because that blue top made her look so much more beautiful! She gained much more confidence about her body and appearance and people stopped bullying her which made me very happy to see! Maybe your friend feels encouraged to look into it when you send her this video.
All of the women on the “sick and tired” example looked stunning in black. Especially the second woman (the one who is also in the thumbnail of this video). She looked amazing in black to me.
If you grew up with the wrong colors and surround yourself with them on a daily basis it is very likely that you perceive them as "stunning" because you don´t know the alternative. There is a signnificant pyschological factor when it comes to color perception. I will post videos about that topic and Color Therapy for those who want to heal their color trauma.
Sehe ich auch so. Es hat vielfach mit Gewöhnung zutun und Farbtrauma, dass die Entscheidung beeinflusst, welche Farben man als schön empfindet. Sobald man dieses Trauma ausheilt, wird man seine wahren Farben tragen wollen und man wird sie als solche erkennen.
My mom was blonde and blue-eyed. In about 1970 (I would have been almost a teenager) she bought a black spring coat. When she'd put it on I couldn't stand it on her; I told her she looked old, wearing it. (She did.)
There are very few exceptions when blond people can wear black. Natural blond usually is medium to soft chroma, and thus, black is very harsh/overwhelming for them in terms of chroma. People who are blond and have fair skin also have low contrast, and black creates a high contrast, making the person look invisible.
I can’t wear black or stark white near my face as I’m very muted/medium, but I have a lot of black pants because that’s all I could find. You’re right about the fashion industry pushing it down our throats.
I can wear black, and in general cooler dark colors. They sharpen my features. But I guess, it makes sense. I had blue black hair as a child/ young adult.
This is a very interesting explanation of what happens with the colour black. I’ve always known not to wear black in summer but didn’t know why it makes you feel hotter. I live in a northern climate with cold winters and notice that the winter birds we see have duller, darker colouring in the winter, presumably to help them keep warm. Until recently I thought black looked good on me but maybe that’s just in contrast with white which looks awful on me. I understand my chroma to be medium (dark brown hair growing up and hazel, sort of olive, eyes). I wonder if those times people told me I looked tired (when I wasn’t) if I was wearing black. Thanks for your video.
Color in animals oftentimes serves three functions: 1. preserve heat/protect from heat 2. to find a partner 3. camouflage from enemies. So birds with dark/black coloring could use it to preserve warmth as I noticed northern birds are oftentimes darker (brown/black) especially those that stay during the winter while birds in warmer climates are more colorful. You have a beautiful color type with hazel olive eyes! That´s rare. That would suggest you have medium or even soft chroma depending on how your features and colors play out in terms of saturation. People who have olive eyes oftentimes don´t benefit from black as it is too much energy and too many frequencies for their color type. I look dull and tired in black as well, it also makes me look older. Thank you for your feedback and thoughts, I appreciate that!
Within the bright chroma, there are subcategories such as true bright, semi-bright, and medium to bright that I consider in my system. In that video, I only used the general term "bright" to distinguish between bright, medium, and soft. Emma is between medium to semi-bright as every person has a chroma spectrum. This means that certain hues she can wear in semi-bright, and others only in medium.
@@ellaraystyle very cool! What are the characteristics that help identify which colors a person might have bright Chroma for? It's also very interesting considering the chakra rules of harmony you mention -- it's interesting that someone who might be in the lower frequency could potentially wear high frequency for certain colors?
The characteristics that determine which colors you can wear in bright chroma are all your features - skin, hair, and eyes. So if one of those features is bright chroma you can potentially wear bright chroma colors - in specific hues that are in harmony with that feature. Did I understand your question right? While it is interesting to see how the chakra system has adapted colors for each chakra that beautifully correspond to the energy levels of the respective colors the danger is that people believ in order to reach a higher frequency they should wear high frequency colors like purple. Scientifically speaking, the frequencies of the colors need to be aligned with your body frequencies to reach higher frequency levels. For some, purple is too much energy - the frequency is too high and thus will have negative consequences for their bodies. Same goes for low energy colors like red. Not everyone can wear it because for some the energy is too low and is not helping the body reach higher levels of energy. So red is only a power color for those with the right Sub Root Skin Color.
@@ellaraystyle thank you, yes that makes sense! I think here with Emma Stone, I am wondering what bright Chroma feature she has that allows her to wear black? Is there something that would have to be black in her face? With the others I understand they have black hair or black eyes but with her, I would love to understand if it's a dark feature or something else that matches her up with black. The other part about chakras: if someone has a red root skin color but has yellow in their eyes (perhaps Kate Middleton but I'm not sure if she has yellow in her eyes so this is more an example), it is interesting that she could potentially wear purple which is the complimentary of yellow? In your video, you say she can't wear purple but then instead, you have a yellow green for her (if I understand correctly) and an indigo blue. I wonder if the red root skin color overrules the potential match between yellow and purple, but you found other ways to harmonize the yellow in her eyes? If we look beyond Kate, is there a rule about it? Like if your root skin color clashes with another feature you have, the skin color is the most important to harmonize your clothing with? Because it would go back to the chakras and what energy your skin needs?
the reason why she can wear black (in low quantities) is because in this image she has bright chroma hair color and her skin tone is leaning bright - though not true bright. Your features are never dissonant to each other but always in harmony. Based on that particular harmony relationship of your features your best colors are determined. Yes, there are rules and color harmony laws for living beings that I have uncovered during my research in the past 10 years.
I look sick in navy and dark burgundy, so I thought I shouldn't wear black. But when I do wear black I look more alive, eyes brighten and fresher in the face. I'm not sure why, because my eyes are blue-grey, my hair is brown and my skin looks yellow.
Black is usually great for bright chroma types that are deep and have high contrast. Without looking at a picture of you it is hard to tell if those apply to you and would make Black as one of your best colors.
This is a sign that your sweat glands are working overtime and that there is an underlying health issue. You could ignore it and continue to just hide it with black or you could look into it, heal your body, and open up the door to the possibility of wearing more beautiful colors that are aligned with your True Color Type (which will support your health). 🍀
Woah this is a bit confusing. I did some research on black and white and read (from a physics website) that white basically is all the visible frequencies and black is the absence of all visible frequencies (in spectral color). Hence black having basically no energy. That's what I read. In physical colors of course black is a mixture of all colors, so has the most energy and white is the absence of any color, so yah. But I feel like, no matter which way around you think, both black and white, are merely just for clear chroma types (or dark or high contrasted people) because any person who is slightly more soft and within the medium spectrum would be overwhelmed by these rather absolute "colors", right?
Yes, it depends on what you describe: light or matter. Black and white are for bright chroma, you´re right. Medium and soft chroma cannot handle that much energy on various levels. When you are an in-between type, let´s say between bright and medium you might get away with both depending on the setting and how you combine those colors with other colors.
It also matters where on the body you wear it, and in what proportions. The further away from the face, and the smaller the visual weight (size), the lesser the impact it’ll have on your appearence. (Sandals vs. a sweater, for example. Or a ring vs. sunglasses.) It also matters what colours you wear with it, what hue and what value contrast it creates with other colours. Pairing black with grey will make the outfit less contrasted compared to black paired with a pink or yellow, for example. White paired with a pastel (low value contrast) vs. paired with a darker colour (high value contrast) etc.
Very true! Color combination and proximity to the face plays a big role in how you will look. When you choose to wear the wrong color further away from the face believing that it makes it ok, you will visually tear your body apart. And it will still have a health effect on your entire body no matter where you wear that wrong color.
Black does not look nice on anyone especially tops. Those dresses in the video can be made to look nice if accompanied with a different colour cardigan or scarf.
Yes, theoretically, you can improve the appearance wearing a less aligned color with your best color on top. For example, if you got your color palette made by me and it reveals that 50% of your wardrobe does not align with you but you don't have the budget to buy a new wardrobe at once or you feel the transition would be too fast or harsh you can still create a more favorable look with both your old and new colors. I will probably make a video about how to do that.
After booking your palette, I will send you an email with detailed and specific requirements for the various types of photos I need for the analysis. The first type is the natural photo without makeup, no jewelry, in a white shirt, white background, specific lighting conditions, device settings, etc. including a close-up of your eye color if possible. The second type are photos that you already have in various settings: daytime, evening, in various wardrobe colors, with makeup, different hair colors if that is what you tend to change often, etc. (It can be 10-20 images: all close up) I also ask a few questions in the email about your coloring, preferences, etc. Does that answer your question and would you feel comfortable sharing those images with me to get your analysis?
Isn’t the heat a friction of all that is not being absorbed…. Blue is red and black is white… etc when it comes to absorption and reflection of colour? Like melanin being a super power repellent… idk 🤷♀️
The heat in your body developing with black clothing is due to the full absorption of energy (light/sun's energy & visible light spectrum/frequencies) by the fabric. If the fabric is not breathable, the body will have more difficulty releasing the excess heat with health consequences long-term (as the color itself will have consequences for your health if it is not aligned with your color type).
Every color in our surrounding affects our body/energy scientifically speaking. If you have a black roof and it is not your aligned color it can affect you negatively also depending on how sensitive you are to color frequencies. The universe is made of frequencies and vibration on various levels. The visible light spectrum (that makes you see colors) is just one of many frequency fields that influence us. Not only that, various types of frequencies are used for warfare, manipulation, marketing, healing, transformation, etc. Which is why I am dedicated about knowing what side of frequencies I want to be on to live a healthy life. Survival of the fittest gets a whole new meaning when you enter this realm.
I am not sure if this works for women of colour. I am a bright winter and my friend is a light spring. . . Both of us can handle bright chroma, we also have black hair n eyes, deep brown skin. . . So v fulfill all d 3 conditions that u have stated above. Yet, i look drained when i wear black n my friend looks grey when she wears black. Otherwise, i can see that ur theory wud work on people who are white.
The science-based system that I developed 10 years ago was purposely designed to work for every ethnicity as I don't discriminate. Whether or not you can wear black depends on your Root Skin Color, Chroma, Depth, and Contrast. People with black hair/brown or black eyes who have true bright chroma usually can wear black well. If your chroma is semi-bright, you will not be able to wear black well even with black hair. If you look drained in black, then this can mean you don't have true bright chroma. If your friend looks grey in black, this can mean her Root Skin Color is not aligned for black. People of color and Asians particularly suffer from the flawed and generic ideas of the seasonal color analysis because it was developed for white women.
It depends how you see black. There is no black in the visible light spectrum. So you can argue black is not a color. When you consider matter and pigments, black is a color as it can be mixed from various pigments and it can be a pigment itself (melanin in the skin for example). So light and matter are not the same when we speak about colors. Black does indeed create the illusion of a slimmer body which is why many women want to wear it. But using black is the least flattering way to create a slimmer shape and most women look unflattering with black which is a shame: so much beauty goes to waste. Many don't know about the better secrets how to create a slimmer and more flattering shape.
@@ellaraystyle actually it's not about black as colour or not, isn't it. It's about why many women use it. Black making most ppl look rough & old, dark blue/marine being a fantastic option, additionally much more elegant than black.
Blue is an equally difficult and unflattering color for many people and yet it is recommended everywhere as a great alternative to black. I don´t give out generic advice as I know how inaccurate and not scientific it is. I enjoy customizing every color for each person to bring out the very best in them. The truth is, there are no universal colors that all people can wear. If you hear someone give out that generic advice they either don´t care enough or don´t know any better.
Wonderful video! As always, very specific and knowledgeable. Thank you! And Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you! It’s been great to find your channel in 2024
Thank you, beautiful to hear that! I wish an amazing New Year 2025! ✨🎉🧡🥳🍀
@ ❤️
This made sense. I have a friend who is absolutely addicted to wearing black, she won't let go of it no matter what. She looks older than she is. I've no way of telling her that, don't feel comfortable with the idea, as I see how much she loves black. In the rare occasions when she wears beige she looks radiant.
I know many women who are obsessed with black for many reasons. I can´t blame them!
One of the girls in my class in 9th grade was only wearing black clothes, oversized shirts and pants until I asked her why she was doing it. Even though she was a bright chroma with black eyes and long black hair and looked good in black I suggested to go shopping with her to find more colors for her and clothing that would show her beautiful body shape.
She agreed and we found bright colors for her like a medium blue crop top that she was brave enough to wear to school the next day. People were shocked to see her in another color and all eyes were on her for days because that blue top made her look so much more beautiful!
She gained much more confidence about her body and appearance and people stopped bullying her which made me very happy to see!
Maybe your friend feels encouraged to look into it when you send her this video.
All of the women on the “sick and tired” example looked stunning in black. Especially the second woman (the one who is also in the thumbnail of this video). She looked amazing in black to me.
If you grew up with the wrong colors and surround yourself with them on a daily basis it is very likely that you perceive them as "stunning" because you don´t know the alternative. There is a signnificant pyschological factor when it comes to color perception. I will post videos about that topic and Color Therapy for those who want to heal their color trauma.
Sehe ich auch so. Es hat vielfach mit Gewöhnung zutun und Farbtrauma, dass die Entscheidung beeinflusst, welche Farben man als schön empfindet. Sobald man dieses Trauma ausheilt, wird man seine wahren Farben tragen wollen und man wird sie als solche erkennen.
My mom was blonde and blue-eyed. In about 1970 (I would have been almost a teenager) she bought a black spring coat. When she'd put it on I couldn't stand it on her; I told her she looked old, wearing it. (She did.)
There are very few exceptions when blond people can wear black.
Natural blond usually is medium to soft chroma, and thus, black is very harsh/overwhelming for them in terms of chroma.
People who are blond and have fair skin also have low contrast, and black creates a high contrast, making the person look invisible.
I can’t wear black or stark white near my face as I’m very muted/medium, but I have a lot of black pants because that’s all I could find. You’re right about the fashion industry pushing it down our throats.
Do you shop online or in stores?
I am very blonde with blue eyes. I like black. I think the contrast works. Certain Browns and burgundy or orangey red, no. Cherry red, yes.
Looks like you know what you like on yourself
I can wear black, and in general cooler dark colors. They sharpen my features. But I guess, it makes sense. I had blue black hair as a child/ young adult.
Sounds like you have a very beautiful hair color!
This is a very interesting explanation of what happens with the colour black. I’ve always known not to wear black in summer but didn’t know why it makes you feel hotter. I live in a northern climate with cold winters and notice that the winter birds we see have duller, darker colouring in the winter, presumably to help them keep warm. Until recently I thought black looked good on me but maybe that’s just in contrast with white which looks awful on me. I understand my chroma to be medium (dark brown hair growing up and hazel, sort of olive, eyes). I wonder if those times people told me I looked tired (when I wasn’t) if I was wearing black. Thanks for your video.
Color in animals oftentimes serves three functions: 1. preserve heat/protect from heat 2. to find a partner 3. camouflage from enemies. So birds with dark/black coloring could use it to preserve warmth as I noticed northern birds are oftentimes darker (brown/black) especially those that stay during the winter while birds in warmer climates are more colorful. You have a beautiful color type with hazel olive eyes! That´s rare. That would suggest you have medium or even soft chroma depending on how your features and colors play out in terms of saturation. People who have olive eyes oftentimes don´t benefit from black as it is too much energy and too many frequencies for their color type. I look dull and tired in black as well, it also makes me look older. Thank you for your feedback and thoughts, I appreciate that!
Could you list a few reasons why Emma Stone is a bright please? 😇
Within the bright chroma, there are subcategories such as true bright, semi-bright, and medium to bright that I consider in my system.
In that video, I only used the general term "bright" to distinguish between bright, medium, and soft.
Emma is between medium to semi-bright as every person has a chroma spectrum.
This means that certain hues she can wear in semi-bright, and others only in medium.
@@ellaraystyle very cool! What are the characteristics that help identify which colors a person might have bright Chroma for? It's also very interesting considering the chakra rules of harmony you mention -- it's interesting that someone who might be in the lower frequency could potentially wear high frequency for certain colors?
The characteristics that determine which colors you can wear in bright chroma are all your features - skin, hair, and eyes.
So if one of those features is bright chroma you can potentially wear bright chroma colors - in specific hues that are in harmony with that feature.
Did I understand your question right?
While it is interesting to see how the chakra system has adapted colors for each chakra that beautifully correspond to the energy levels of the respective colors the danger is that people believ in order to reach a higher frequency they should wear high frequency colors like purple.
Scientifically speaking, the frequencies of the colors need to be aligned with your body frequencies to reach higher frequency levels.
For some, purple is too much energy - the frequency is too high and thus will have negative consequences for their bodies.
Same goes for low energy colors like red. Not everyone can wear it because for some the energy is too low and is not helping the body reach higher levels of energy.
So red is only a power color for those with the right Sub Root Skin Color.
@@ellaraystyle thank you, yes that makes sense! I think here with Emma Stone, I am wondering what bright Chroma feature she has that allows her to wear black? Is there something that would have to be black in her face? With the others I understand they have black hair or black eyes but with her, I would love to understand if it's a dark feature or something else that matches her up with black.
The other part about chakras: if someone has a red root skin color but has yellow in their eyes (perhaps Kate Middleton but I'm not sure if she has yellow in her eyes so this is more an example), it is interesting that she could potentially wear purple which is the complimentary of yellow? In your video, you say she can't wear purple but then instead, you have a yellow green for her (if I understand correctly) and an indigo blue. I wonder if the red root skin color overrules the potential match between yellow and purple, but you found other ways to harmonize the yellow in her eyes? If we look beyond Kate, is there a rule about it? Like if your root skin color clashes with another feature you have, the skin color is the most important to harmonize your clothing with? Because it would go back to the chakras and what energy your skin needs?
the reason why she can wear black (in low quantities) is because in this image she has bright chroma hair color and her skin tone is leaning bright - though not true bright.
Your features are never dissonant to each other but always in harmony.
Based on that particular harmony relationship of your features your best colors are determined.
Yes, there are rules and color harmony laws for living beings that I have uncovered during my research in the past 10 years.
I look sick in navy and dark burgundy, so I thought I shouldn't wear black. But when I do wear black I look more alive, eyes brighten and fresher in the face. I'm not sure why, because my eyes are blue-grey, my hair is brown and my skin looks yellow.
Black is usually great for bright chroma types that are deep and have high contrast.
Without looking at a picture of you it is hard to tell if those apply to you and would make Black as one of your best colors.
Interesting, but I'll still wear black because I sweat a lot regardless of what colour I wear and only black hides the stains
This is a sign that your sweat glands are working overtime and that there is an underlying health issue.
You could ignore it and continue to just hide it with black or you could look into it, heal your body, and open up the door to the possibility of wearing more beautiful colors that are aligned with your True Color Type (which will support your health). 🍀
Woah this is a bit confusing. I did some research on black and white and read (from a physics website) that white basically is all the visible frequencies and black is the absence of all visible frequencies (in spectral color). Hence black having basically no energy. That's what I read. In physical colors of course black is a mixture of all colors, so has the most energy and white is the absence of any color, so yah. But I feel like, no matter which way around you think, both black and white, are merely just for clear chroma types (or dark or high contrasted people) because any person who is slightly more soft and within the medium spectrum would be overwhelmed by these rather absolute "colors", right?
Yes, it depends on what you describe: light or matter. Black and white are for bright chroma, you´re right. Medium and soft chroma cannot handle that much energy on various levels. When you are an in-between type, let´s say between bright and medium you might get away with both depending on the setting and how you combine those colors with other colors.
It also matters where on the body you wear it, and in what proportions. The further away from the face, and the smaller the visual weight (size), the lesser the impact it’ll have on your appearence. (Sandals vs. a sweater, for example. Or a ring vs. sunglasses.)
It also matters what colours you wear with it, what hue and what value contrast it creates with other colours. Pairing black with grey will make the outfit less contrasted compared to black paired with a pink or yellow, for example.
White paired with a pastel (low value contrast) vs. paired with a darker colour (high value contrast) etc.
Very true! Color combination and proximity to the face plays a big role in how you will look. When you choose to wear the wrong color further away from the face believing that it makes it ok, you will visually tear your body apart.
And it will still have a health effect on your entire body no matter where you wear that wrong color.
People say that I can wear black. That black suits me.
People with bright chroma who have black or very dark brown hair can usually wear black really well.
@@ellaraystyle I am not bright. They say my black can't be like satin black.
so muted black..would make sense for medium chroma types with black hair.
Black does not look nice on anyone especially tops. Those dresses in the video can be made to look nice if accompanied with a different colour cardigan or scarf.
Yes, theoretically, you can improve the appearance wearing a less aligned color with your best color on top. For example, if you got your color palette made by me and it reveals that 50% of your wardrobe does not align with you but you don't have the budget to buy a new wardrobe at once or you feel the transition would be too fast or harsh you can still create a more favorable look with both your old and new colors. I will probably make a video about how to do that.
@@ellaraystyleHello! What photos do we need to provide if we purchase a colour palette from you?
After booking your palette, I will send you an email with detailed and specific requirements for the various types of photos I need for the analysis.
The first type is the natural photo without makeup, no jewelry, in a white shirt, white background, specific lighting conditions, device settings, etc. including a close-up of your eye color if possible.
The second type are photos that you already have in various settings: daytime, evening, in various wardrobe colors, with makeup, different hair colors if that is what you tend to change often, etc. (It can be 10-20 images: all close up)
I also ask a few questions in the email about your coloring, preferences, etc.
Does that answer your question and would you feel comfortable sharing those images with me to get your analysis?
Isn’t the heat a friction of all that is not being absorbed…. Blue is red and black is white… etc when it comes to absorption and reflection of colour? Like melanin being a super power repellent… idk 🤷♀️
The heat in your body developing with black clothing is due to the full absorption of energy (light/sun's energy & visible light spectrum/frequencies) by the fabric. If the fabric is not breathable, the body will have more difficulty releasing the excess heat with health consequences long-term (as the color itself will have consequences for your health if it is not aligned with your color type).
@@ellaraystyle Do you think colors of a house can affect our energy? Like for instance if you have a black roof?
Every color in our surrounding affects our body/energy scientifically speaking.
If you have a black roof and it is not your aligned color it can affect you negatively also depending on how sensitive you are to color frequencies.
The universe is made of frequencies and vibration on various levels.
The visible light spectrum (that makes you see colors) is just one of many frequency fields that influence us.
Not only that, various types of frequencies are used for warfare, manipulation, marketing, healing, transformation, etc.
Which is why I am dedicated about knowing what side of frequencies I want to be on to live a healthy life.
Survival of the fittest gets a whole new meaning when you enter this realm.
Is black dangerous to our health if we done suit it but use it away from the face- bottom half etc.
it has a health impact no matter where you wear it! I personally don´t take risks in this matter.
I am not sure if this works for women of colour. I am a bright winter and my friend is a light spring. . . Both of us can handle bright chroma, we also have black hair n eyes, deep brown skin. . . So v fulfill all d 3 conditions that u have stated above. Yet, i look drained when i wear black n my friend looks grey when she wears black. Otherwise, i can see that ur theory wud work on people who are white.
The science-based system that I developed 10 years ago was purposely designed to work for every ethnicity as I don't discriminate.
Whether or not you can wear black depends on your Root Skin Color, Chroma, Depth, and Contrast.
People with black hair/brown or black eyes who have true bright chroma usually can wear black well.
If your chroma is semi-bright, you will not be able to wear black well even with black hair.
If you look drained in black, then this can mean you don't have true bright chroma.
If your friend looks grey in black, this can mean her Root Skin Color is not aligned for black.
People of color and Asians particularly suffer from the flawed and generic ideas of the seasonal color analysis because it was developed for white women.
Black is overrated.
not only overrrated but also pushed down our throats by the beauty and fashion industry.
Firstly, black isn't a colour. Secundum, it's only some kind of women wearing black guessing it makes rhem look less massive.
It depends how you see black. There is no black in the visible light spectrum. So you can argue black is not a color.
When you consider matter and pigments, black is a color as it can be mixed from various pigments and it can be a pigment itself (melanin in the skin for example). So light and matter are not the same when we speak about colors.
Black does indeed create the illusion of a slimmer body which is why many women want to wear it.
But using black is the least flattering way to create a slimmer shape and most women look unflattering with black which is a shame: so much beauty goes to waste.
Many don't know about the better secrets how to create a slimmer and more flattering shape.
@@ellaraystyle actually it's not about black as colour or not, isn't it. It's about why many women use it. Black making most ppl look rough & old, dark blue/marine being a fantastic option, additionally much more elegant than black.
Blue is an equally difficult and unflattering color for many people and yet it is recommended everywhere as a great alternative to black. I don´t give out generic advice as I know how inaccurate and not scientific it is. I enjoy customizing every color for each person to bring out the very best in them.
The truth is, there are no universal colors that all people can wear. If you hear someone give out that generic advice they either don´t care enough or don´t know any better.