Autumn Seasons

Soft Autumn vs.
Deep Autumn - How to Tell the Difference

Soft Autumn and Deep Autumn are two of the most commonly confused color seasons - and the confusion makes sense. Both are warm, both sit within the Autumn family, and both can have similar hair and eye colors. But they have meaningfully different palettes and different rules for what to avoid. Getting this wrong can leave you feeling like the season system "doesn't work" - when in reality you're just on the wrong team.

The Core Difference: Depth and Muting

The simplest way to understand the difference is this: Soft Autumn is muted and medium-depth, while Deep Autumn is dark and rich.

Soft Autumn leans toward the Summer side of the warm/cool spectrum - it is the warmest, most muted of the Summer-adjacent palettes. Deep Autumn leans toward the Winter side - it is the deepest, richest of the Autumn palettes and can sometimes appear to have a slight cool edge due to sheer depth.

Feature Soft Autumn Deep Autumn
Depth Light to medium - coloring is blended and soft Medium to deep - coloring is rich and intense
Skin Fair to medium, warm or neutral-warm, often peachy or ivory Medium to deep, golden, olive, bronze, or warm tan
Hair Light to medium warm brown, dirty blonde, mousy, soft auburn Dark brown, warm black, rich auburn, deep copper
Eyes Hazel, soft green, warm blue-grey, light warm brown Dark brown, olive, warm dark hazel, rich amber
Best neutrals Warm taupe, camel, soft ivory, warm greige, mushroom Dark brown, warm black, deep olive, rich chocolate
Best colors Dusty terracotta, sage green, warm mauve, soft rust, muted gold Deep rust, rich burgundy, warm forest green, plum-brown, mustard
What to avoid Anything too dark, vivid, or pure - including black and bright orange Anything too light, pastel, icy, or cool - including beige and pale pink

How to Tell Which One You Are

Ask yourself these three questions:

1. What is your natural hair depth?

If your natural hair is medium brown, dirty blonde, soft auburn, or anything you would describe as "not particularly light or dark" - you are more likely Soft Autumn. If your hair is dark brown, rich auburn, warm black, or deep copper, you are more likely Deep Autumn.

2. How do very dark colors look on you?

Hold a piece of true black fabric under your chin. If it makes you look washed out, heavy, or gives you dark shadows - you are most likely Soft Autumn. If black looks strong and flattering and gives you presence - you may be Deep Autumn (or Deep Winter - a professional analysis will clarify).

3. How do muted, dusty colors look on you?

Try a dusty, blended terracotta or sage green. If these feel like your natural element - perfectly harmonious - you are likely Soft Autumn. If they feel a little too quiet and you look better when you add depth and richness, you are more likely Deep Autumn.

The honest truth: These two seasons are genuinely difficult to distinguish without professional analysis. Even experienced analysts sometimes debate the border between Soft Autumn, Deep Autumn, and Deep Winter. If you are consistently confused between these seasons, a professional color analysis is the clearest path forward.

Soft Autumn Best Colors

The Soft Autumn palette is warm, muted, and medium-depth. Think the colors of a soft, hazy autumn afternoon - nothing too vivid, nothing too dark:

Metals: Antique gold, brushed gold, bronze. Avoid bright silver or rose gold.

Deep Autumn Best Colors

The Deep Autumn palette is warm, rich, and dark. Think the colors of autumn at its most dramatic - bold, earthy, and saturated:

Metals: Gold, warm gold, antique gold. Avoid silver and anything icy or cool-toned.

Still Not Sure Which Autumn You Are?

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