


Find your most flattering shades – save them and bring to your colorist.
Your most flattering shades, from roots to tips
Your best tones
True Autumn is the warmest of all seasons – your hair should radiate golden, coppery warmth. Rich, saturated tones that echo autumn leaves look incredible on you: think deep golds, warm chestnuts, and coppery reds.
What to go for
Your best shades have a visible warm base – golden brown, auburn, warm chocolate, copper, and rich honey. You can handle more intensity and depth than Soft Autumn, so don't be afraid of bold warm tones.
What to avoid
Avoid cool ash tones, platinum, blue-black, or anything that strips the warmth from your look. Even your highlights should lean gold or copper, never silver or icy.
Ashy: A cool, grey-based undertone that neutralizes warmth – the opposite of brassy or golden.
Muted: Soft and greyed-down, not vivid or saturated. Think dusty, smoky, or faded rather than bright.
Warm: Golden, honey, copper, or red undertones that add richness and sunlit quality.
Cool: Blue, violet, or grey undertones – the opposite of warm. Think icy, silvery, or smoky.
Brassy: Unwanted warm, orange-yellow tones – usually what "ashy" toners are designed to counteract.

Copper Red

Deep Auburn

Auburn

Russet

Rich Copper

Bronze

Golden Brown

Deep Golden Brown

Warm Brown

Warm Chestnut

Chestnut

Dark Chestnut Brown
Hold up a photo of yourself next to these shades to see which one suits you – then save and bring it to your colorist.
The right cut can balance your proportions and frame your best features
How to find your face shape
Pull your hair back and look straight into a mirror. Compare three widths: forehead, cheekbones, and jawline. Which is widest? Then look at the overall shape – is your face longer than wide, or about equal? Finally, check your jawline: is it rounded, angular, or pointed? Those three clues will point you to your shape.
Balancing specific features
Long or high forehead
Bangs are your best tool – straight, curtain, or side-swept all work to shorten the forehead visually. Face-framing layers that start at the temples also help. Avoid pulling all hair back, which exposes the full forehead length.
Short or low forehead
Skip heavy straight bangs – they eat into already limited space and can make the face look compressed. A wispy side-sweep or volume on top creates the illusion of more height. A center part can work well since it shows the forehead rather than hiding it.
Wide jawline
Soft layers around the jaw break up the straight line with movement. Go longer than the jaw – hair ending exactly at the jawline draws a horizontal line across the widest point. Side-swept bangs draw the eye upward, away from the jaw.
Prominent nose
A center part draws the eye straight down the nose like an arrow – avoid it. A side part creates asymmetry that distributes attention. Volume, waves, and texture around the face give the eye other things to land on. Bangs shorten the visible vertical line of the face.
Strong cheekbones
Show them off – layers ending at cheekbone level frame and emphasize the bone structure. Swept-back or tucked-behind-the-ear styles let the cheekbones shine.
Narrow chin
Build volume at chin level to widen the lower face – outward-flipped ends, a bob that hits below the chin, or layers that add fullness below the cheekbones all help balance a tapered jawline.
Curly hair + bangs
Curly bangs shrink up significantly and need daily styling to look intentional. If you don't want the maintenance, curtain bangs are the most forgiving option – they blend into the sides as they grow out and look good even when you skip styling. Always ask your stylist to cut bangs longer than the desired length, since curls spring up. If the upkeep isn't for you, face-framing layers give a similar forehead-softening effect without the commitment.
Ponytails + updos
Pulling hair back exposes your full face shape, so placement matters. Round faces benefit from a high ponytail – it adds vertical height. Long faces look better with a mid-height or low ponytail to avoid adding more length. Square faces are softened by leaving a few face-framing pieces out around the jaw and temples. Heart-shaped faces look balanced with loose tendrils at the chin. If you have a high forehead and don't want bangs, pulling a few shorter pieces forward at the hairline softens the look without committing to a cut.