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Colour Pairing Tool

Pick a colour and see exactly what to wear it with, tonal, bold, and always-safe neutral pairings.

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How to use colour theory to get dressed

The fastest way to know if two colours work together is to picture a colour wheel. Colours that sit next to each other, like olive and mustard, share undertones and create a calm, tonal outfit. Colours opposite each other, like navy and rust, give you bold, high-contrast looks. And any colour paired with a neutral will simply work. This tool does that maths for you, using real wardrobe colours rather than abstract swatches.

What goes with the colours you wear most

What goes with navy

Wear it with anything: Yellow Mustard Rust Red Sky Blue Terracotta Burgundy Pink
Tonal neutrals: White Cream Camel Grey Charcoal

What goes with olive

Safe neutrals: White Cream Camel Grey Navy Charcoal
Tonal (analogous): Sage Yellow Mustard
Bold (complementary): Purple Lavender
Balanced (triadic): Teal Sky Blue

What goes with burgundy

Safe neutrals: White Cream Camel Grey Navy Charcoal
Tonal (analogous): Red Blush Rust Terracotta
Bold (complementary): Teal
Balanced (triadic): Sage Blue Sky Blue

What goes with camel

Wear it with anything: Yellow Mustard Rust Red Sky Blue Terracotta Burgundy Pink
Tonal neutrals: White Cream Grey Navy Charcoal

What goes with grey

Wear it with anything: Yellow Mustard Rust Red Sky Blue Terracotta Burgundy Pink
Tonal neutrals: White Cream Camel Navy Charcoal
Frequently Asked

What colours go together when getting dressed?

Three combinations reliably work: tonal (shades next to each other on the colour wheel) for a calm look, complementary (opposite colours) for high contrast, and any colour with a neutral like navy, grey or camel for a safe, balanced outfit.

What colour goes with everything?

Neutrals (white, cream, grey, navy, camel and charcoal) pair with almost any colour, which is why they're the backbone of a versatile wardrobe. When in doubt, ground a bold colour with one of them.

How many colours should an outfit have?

A good rule of thumb is two to three colours: one or two main colours plus a neutral to balance them. More than three tends to look busy unless the extra colours are small accents.

How does this colour pairing tool work?

Pick a colour, or enter your own, and the tool uses colour-theory relationships (analogous, complementary and triadic) to suggest real wardrobe colours that go with it, plus the neutrals that always work.

Andy

Outfits that just work.

Andy knows the colours in your wardrobe and pairs them for you, every morning, tuned to your taste and the weather. Snap your clothes and see what to wear.

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