Soft Summer vs True Summer: How to Tell the Difference

Soft Summer and True Summer share cool-neutral undertones and medium depth, but Soft Summer is more muted while True Summer is balanced cool. Soft Summer signature colors: taupe, sage, soft plum, muted blue, cocoa rose, cool gray. True Summer signature: dusty rose, periwinkle, sage, soft plum, powder blue. Test: True Summer can wear bolder shades like teal and soft burgundy; Soft Summer needs everything dustier and softer to match its low-contrast natural coloring.

Why these two get confused

Soft Summer and True Summer are both cool, both soft, both low-contrast and romantic. They share the gentlest palettes in the system — dusty roses, muted blues, grayed lavenders — and their overall aesthetic is so similar that sitting between them is one of the most common results in Korean color analysis.

Soft Summer vs True Summer at a glance

The two seasons split on three things color analysts measure: undertone, value (how light or deep the coloring is), and chroma (how muted or clear it is). Here is how they compare.

TraitSoft SummerTrue Summer
UndertoneCool-neutral, leans mutedCool, balanced
Value (depth)Medium, softMedium
Chroma (saturation)Low — everything grayedLow-medium — slightly clearer
ContrastVery low, blendedLow to medium
Best metalsSilver, sometimes rose goldSilver only
Signature colorsTaupe, sage, soft plum, cocoa roseDusty rose, periwinkle, powder blue
Soft Summer Palette
#D09898#A898B8#608888#8898A8#A88090#909880
True Summer Palette
#E8A0B0#C0A8D8#8098B8#C098A8#A06080#A0B8D0

The core difference

Soft Summer is the more muted and neutral-cool of the two, sitting at the Summer-Autumn boundary. Its colors are grayer, more diffused, and more understated. Dusty rose, grayed lavender, and muted teal suit it better than anything with real clarity. See the full Soft Summer palette for the range.

True Summer has slightly more depth and saturation. Its cool tones are cleaner and more defined — rose pink, lavender, and dusty blue have a soft clarity to them. True Summer is cool, period. The complete True Summer palette shows how much clearer its colors run.

Three tests to tell them apart

The jewelry test: both wear silver well, but Soft Summer can sometimes handle rose gold or even warm mixed metals — True Summer looks best in silver only.

The color test: hold rose pink (#E8A0B0) against your face, then dusty rose (#D09898). Rose pink is True Summer's signature — it should make your skin look fresh and clear. Dusty rose is Soft Summer's territory — it should feel more natural and harmonious. Whichever harmonizes more cleanly with your skin reveals your season.

The saturation test: can you wear medium-saturation cool colors without being overwhelmed, or do you need everything heavily muted? If medium saturation works, lean True Summer. If only the most muted, grayed-out tones harmonize, lean Soft Summer.

Find your color season — free analysis

Celebrity examples

Soft Summer: Moon Ga-young shows muted cool-neutral coloring at its most refined. Grayed, diffused tones feel like natural extensions of her features. Explore the full Soft Summer palette.

True Summer: Cate Blanchett has cool, soft coloring with enough depth to carry the slightly more saturated True Summer palette. Rose, lavender, and soft berry make her glow. See the True Summer palette.

What happens when you wear the wrong season

A Soft Summer wearing True Summer's slightly more saturated rose and lavender will look subtly overwhelmed — the colors have too much intensity for their extremely muted coloring. The face recedes behind the color.

A True Summer wearing Soft Summer's grayed, ultra-muted palette will look slightly washed out — the colors don't provide enough visual definition. The face loses clarity and appears flat.

Still unsure? Try the analysis

Soft Summer and True Summer are one of the subtlest pairs to distinguish. Our free AI color analysis gives you a confidence score and a secondary season, so you'll know exactly how firmly you sit in one versus the other. Upload a selfie in natural light and find out in about a minute.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I'm Soft Summer or True Summer?

Hold a clearer cool color like rose pink against your face, then a dusty, grayed version of it. If the clearer shade makes your skin look fresh and defined, you lean True Summer. If only the muted, grayed shade harmonizes and the clearer one looks slightly too strong, you lean Soft Summer. Soft Summer needs lower chroma; True Summer can carry a touch more saturation.

What's the difference between Soft Summer and True Summer?

Both are cool and soft, but Soft Summer is cool-neutral and more muted, sitting at the Summer-Autumn boundary — dusty rose, grayed lavender, and muted teal suit it. True Summer is balanced cool with slightly more depth and saturation — rose, lavender, and dusty blue are its signatures.

Can you be between Soft Summer and True Summer?

Yes — both are cool and soft, making them easy to sit between. If your result shows low confidence, try both palettes in natural light. The key distinction is whether your coloring leans cool-neutral and muted (Soft Summer) or balanced cool with a little more clarity (True Summer).

Which Summer type is most common?

Soft Summer is generally considered the most common Summer type — the muted cool-neutral coloring appears across many backgrounds and ethnicities.