It’s the ultimate style dilemma (and heartbreak): your heart says "Goth Chic," but your color palette says "Golden Hour."
If you’ve been told you’re an Autumn, Spring, or Summer, you’ve likely been told to "avoid black at all costs." But let’s be real—sometimes only black and white will do. If you aren't ready to give up these staples, you don't have to. You just need to learn how to cheat the system.
Here is how to make black and white work for your season by breaking a few rules strategically.
1. The "Buffer" Rule: Mind the Gap
The reason black and white look "bad" on non-Winters is usually because they are sitting directly against your skin, reflecting a color cast onto your face.
• Autumns & Springs: If you’re wearing a black coat or blazer, wear a Warm Ivory scarf or a Gold necklace between the fabric and your chin. This "buffers" the harshness and brings your season’s warmth back to your face.
• Summers: If you’re wearing a stark white top, layer a Soft Grey or Slate knit over your shoulders. It cools down the "vibrancy" of the white so it doesn't wash you out.
2. Manipulate the Texture
The flatter and shinier a fabric is, the more "Winter" it becomes. To make black and white work for softer seasons, you need to change the way the fabric holds light.
• For Autumns: Instead of a black silk shirt, go for black suede, corduroy, or chunky knits. The texture "eats" the light, making the black appear softer and more "brown-adjacent," which is much kinder to your skin. Pair your whites with heavy gold jewelry to ground the look in your natural warmth.
• For Springs: Since you have a delicate clarity, try wearing your white in sheer or lightweight fabrics like chiffon. This prevents the white from looking too "solid" and overwhelming. When it comes to black, the best move is to keep it away from your face entirely by using it for bottoms, belts, or shoes.
• For Summers: Your best version of black is one that looks slightly "faded" or washed-out, like a vintage tee or charcoal-leaning denim. For white, look for textured fabrics like linen or eyelet lace. The natural shadows in these fabrics turn a stark white into a series of soft, muted greys that harmonize with your coloring.
3. Play with Proportions (Keep it "South")
Color analysis matters most from the chest up. If you love black and white, simply move the "wrong" colors away from your portrait area.
• The Bottom-Heavy Strategy: Wear your black leather pants or white denim on your lower half. Since these aren't reflecting light onto your face, you can wear almost any color you want.
• The Open-Front Trick: Wear a black cardigan or blazer, but leave it open. Wear a tank top or tee in your best seasonal color underneath. This keeps the black in your outfit for the vibe, but keeps your "power color" closest to your skin.
4. Adjust Your Makeup
If you are going to wear colors that aren't in your season, you have to "meet the clothes halfway" with your beauty routine.
• If you're a Warm Season (Autumn/Spring) wearing Black: Use a slightly more pigmented bronzer or a warmer lip color than usual. This prevents the black from making you look "grey" or sallow.
• If you're a Soft Season (Summer) wearing White: Add a bit more definition to your eyes. Stark white can make a Summer’s features look "blurry," so a bit of taupe eyeliner can help you hold your own against the bright fabric.
Over at our sister beauty-blog, we’ve put together a deep dive on more makeup hacks that make black and white look stunning on every season.
The Bottom Line…
You don't have to throw away your favorite black dress just because a color wheel told you so. Use these "buffer" techniques and texture swaps, and you can keep the aesthetic you love while still looking like the best version of yourself.
