One selfie is all it takes. KStyler reads your skin, eyes and hair, then maps you to your exact Korean 12-tone season — the palette that makes you look rested, lit-from-within, and unmistakably you.
Get Your ReportTake one selfie — no glasses, natural light
Get your 12-tone season and full palette
Wear the colors that genuinely suit you
Our color engine is proprietary. From one photo it reads dozens of signals — your skin's undertone, the depth of your eyes, the contrast between your hair and complexion — and resolves them into one of the Korean 12 tones. It's the framework professional Korean image consultants work from, encoded so the same face always returns the same season.
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Your season is placed on the three axes the Korean method runs on — warm to cool, light to deep, and muted to bright — plus your overall contrast level. That precision is the difference between a palette that flatters you and one that washes you out.
Once your tone is set, you get your core palette — sixteen shades picked for your colouring. Wear them near your face and they do the work for you: brighter eyes, more even skin, and a lot less makeup needed to look like yourself on a good day.
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A handful of your colors are power colors — the ones that make people ask whether you slept well or did something new. KStyler flags them, then gives you the hue-by-hue best-versus-avoid across reds, blues, greens and the rest, so the guesswork is gone.

From there it's just shopping. Your palette travels with you, so any top, dress or coat you're tempted by can be checked against the colors that suit you — explained in plain language, never colour theory.
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A deterministic engine resolves your tone from one selfie — the same scan always returns the same season, never a different answer on a different day.
Far finer than the basic four seasons — twelve tones tuned to real skin, the standard used in professional Korean color analysis.
Every rule comes from a Korean-trained image consultant's professional practice — codified into the technology, not crowd-sourced from the internet.