Adds structure that balances an oval face and reads contemporary.
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Your colouring is warm with low contrast, which means soft earth tones flatter you far more than cool, high-contrast palettes. For a 42-year-old in Berlin's temperate climate working in software / it, the goal is a refined, low-effort wardrobe that reads modern without trying too hard.
If you change only three things, change these. The rest of the report builds on them.
Tailoring the shoulders and hem of what you own does more for your goal to look more professional than any new purchase.
Build on warm neutrals and one accent near the face; match metals and leather to your undertone.
One high-impact layer raises the perceived quality of everything you already own.
A quick visual summary of where we're taking your style: example looks on your photo, your colour palette, a hero piece, and the overall direction.
01
Soft, warm neutrals flatter your low-contrast colouring. Here's where your palette sits on the wheel — and exactly why each tone works.
Echoes your warm undertone and keeps focus on your face without harsh contrast.
A warm earth tone that adds healthy depth to medium skin.
Softer than pure white — flatters low-contrast colouring up close.
A reliable neutral that reads modern and professional.
Refined warmth that pairs effortlessly across the wardrobe.
Cool and washed-out against a warm complexion — drains the face.
Too stark for low contrast; creates an unflattering hard edge.
Fights your undertone and pulls attention away from you.
Contrast: Keep top-to-bottom contrast soft — tonal, layered looks flatter you. Avoid white-next-to-black.
Your hero colour near the face is Rust — build neutral bases and let it lead.
One accent (Rust) on a neutral base reads considered, not loud.
One accent (Cream) on a neutral base reads considered, not loud.
An all-neutral pairing is your fail-safe for any occasion.
Warm gold harmonises with your undertone and warms the complexion.
An understated warm metal for buckles and watch cases.
Treat warm-toned leather as your 'metal' — straps, belts, shoes tie it together.
Avoid bright chrome / cool silver next to the face — it can read cold against warm skin.
02
Cuts that flatter your face shape — with real examples to take to your barber — plus the beard and frame shapes that finish the picture.
Adds structure that balances an oval face and reads contemporary.
Clean, low-maintenance, and quietly sharpens the jawline.
Classic proportion for an oval face — polished without feeling stiff.
Adds movement and depth when you want a slightly longer, relaxed look.
Shortens the face and dates the overall look.
Strips away length and texture — reads harsh on an oval face and ages the overall look.
A short, even beard suits you; keep the cheek line natural and the neckline clean.
Reshape the neckline weekly; full trim every 3–4 weeks to keep the cut intact.
Daily moisturiser and SPF; aim for a healthy matte finish, not shine.
Tidy stray brow hairs and nostril/ear hair — small things that read as 'polished'.
A matte clay or paste for the textured crop — pea-sized, worked through towel-dry hair.
Four personalized beard and mustache directions on your photo — take these to your barber.
A tidy, even line suits an oval face — natural cheek line, clean neckline.
Low-maintenance texture that reads modern without overpowering your features.
Even growth with a defined neckline — versatile on an oval face.
A neat mustache paired with a small chin patch adds character without bulk.
Two optical frames and two sunglasses suited to your face — previewed on your photo.
Classic balance for an oval face — versatile and modern.
Keeps proportions in check without elongating.
Classic balance for an oval face in sun.
Relaxed edge while keeping proportions balanced outdoors.
Scarves, neckwear and ties chosen for your colouring and climate — previewed on your own photo.
A soft neutral scarf in your palette adds warmth and a finished, considered layer over coats and knitwear.
A textured, matte tie in your palette reads refined — the detail that elevates a jacket for work.
03
Tailored, never tight
This reads as an athletic V-taper — the cuts below are tuned to it.
You already have width up top; extra padding would exaggerate it.
Balances torso and legs; too short looks boxy, too long shortens you.
Hints at shape while keeping comfort and movement.
Sits at the natural waist and lengthens the leg line.
A slight break is the most flattering, modern length.
A sliver of cuff signals a jacket that actually fits.
Classic proportions flatter an average height without tricks.
04
Photorealistic outfit directions for the moments that matter.
Navy unstructured blazer, cream knit, charcoal trousers, brown leather derbies.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
Olive overshirt, cream tee, dark denim, suede chelsea boots.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
Camel crewneck, taupe chinos, cream leather sneakers, field watch.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
Midnight-navy suit, crisp white shirt (no tie), dark brown oxfords.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
Camel overcoat over cream crewneck, taupe trousers, cream leather sneakers.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
Rust merino polo, charcoal wool trousers, brown leather loafers, brass watch.
Stylistic alternatives from our catalogue — close in category and colour, not necessarily the exact pieces in the photo.
05
A small, deliberate set of pieces that multiply into many outfits — bought in the order that pays off fastest.
Unstructured navy blazer€189
Charcoal wool-blend trousers€110
Brown leather derbies€160
Cream leather sneakers€120
Tan suede chelsea boots€190
Camel merino crewneck€95
Olive overshirt€79
Field watch, cream dial€145The same handful of pieces, recombined into a full week of outfits — so nothing in your wardrobe sits unused.
Your highest-impact buy; invest if you stretch anywhere.
Mid-tier is the sweet spot for fit and fabric.
Mid-tier is the sweet spot for fit and fabric.
Spend up here — good leather outlasts three cheap pairs.
06
Sample curated list for the demo report.
07
The textures, fabrics, accessories and shoes that complete the wardrobe.
Fine, breathable knit that layers cleanly under a jacket.
Soft matte surface adds warmth and depth to shirts and trousers.
Matte texture in warm browns ties your palette together.
Holds shape and reads refined in cooler weather.
Keep sheen low — matte fabrics look more expensive on most men.



08
The small mechanics and habits that separate well-dressed from expensively-dressed.
A warm woody-amber (sandalwood, cedar, vetiver) fragrance suits your colouring; keep it close to the skin for daytime.
09
Style principles
Fewer, better pieces beat a crowded wardrobe.
Tailoring the shoulders and hem changes everything.
Let your palette lead; keep contrast soft.
A sharp cut and tidy beard finish the whole look.
Your style evolves — start a new Premium report with updated photos for 6 fresh photorealistic looks, personalized facial-hair and eyewear previews, and a capsule built around your current goals.