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Create a high-end, editorial-style personal color analysis infographic using the provided portrait. Step 1 — Color Analysis (REQUIRED) Analyze the subject’s: Skin undertone (cool / warm / neutral) Value (light / medium / deep) Chroma (soft/muted vs clear/bright) Contrast level (low / medium / high between features) Then: Assign the most accurate seasonal palette from the 16 season system (Soft/Light/Cool/Warm/Bright/Deep Summer/Autumn/Winter/Spring)

Step 2 — Global Constraints All colors, metals, hair, and makeup MUST derive from the identified season. No cross-season contamination. Color palette must feel cohesive and realistic (fabric-based, slightly muted unless the season is bright).

Layout & Style Clean, minimal, light neutral background. Portrait top-left. Structured grid layout. Thin sans-serif typography, subtle tracking. Soft shadows, rounded corners. Editorial / Pinterest aesthetic.

Top Section (Dynamic) Title: YOUR COLOR PALETTE Subtitle: [DETECTED SEASON NAME] Descriptor line: 3–5 traits based on analysis. Color Swatch Sections Neutrals / 2. Best Colors / 3. Supporting Colors Each swatch must include: Color name + Specific descriptor (2–3 words). (Example: Dusty Blue — muted denim blue)

⚠️ CRITICAL — Fabric Draping Rule Apply to ALL portrait instances: Asymmetrical wrap drape, starts from one shoulder, falls diagonally across chest. Natural folds, soft tension. Avoid symmetrical, poncho-style, or flat horizontal necklines. “See the Colors in Action” 10–14 tiles of the same portrait. Each tile uses a different palette color with the same asymmetrical drape. Face remains unchanged, clean grid.

Bottom Modules (Dynamic) Metals: Choose 2–3 matching metals (Silver/White Gold for Cool, Gold/Bronze for Warm). Hair Tones: Range aligned with the palette. Makeup: Blush, Lip, Shadow, Liner (all aligned with palette). Eyes: Identify and label visible eye color with tonal quality.

Final Constraint Maintain strict consistency between the detected seasonal palette and every visual element. Do not introduce colors, metals, or tones outside the inferred palette.