Free Fashion & Style Tools

Free online fashion tools including outfit color palette generator. No account needed, no sign up — runs entirely in your browser.

Free online fashion tools for putting outfits together, matching colors, choosing nail shades, and making your clothes feel more intentional without turning getting dressed into a whole project. Pick a color, choose a skin tone, compare swatches, copy hex codes, and build a look that actually makes sense. No account, no app download, no sign up. Everything runs in your browser.

Fashion advice online can get weirdly complicated. You search for what color shoes go with a green dress, what nail polish suits olive skin, or how to match a bag with an outfit, and suddenly you are reading about seasonal color analysis, undertones, contrast levels, capsule wardrobes, and rules that sound more stressful than helpful.

These tools are for the normal version of that problem: you have a piece you want to wear, a color you like, or an event coming up, and you want a quick answer that looks good.

Free fashion and style tools

Outfit color palette generator

The outfit color palette generator helps you build a coordinated outfit around one base color. Choose the main color you are working with, and the tool gives you a matching palette for:

  • the main outfit color
  • accessories
  • nails
  • shoes
  • bag

It is useful when you already know the hero piece: a red dress, navy blazer, sage green shirt, cream trousers, pink skirt, brown coat, black jumpsuit, or any other item you want to style. Instead of guessing which colors clash and which colors quietly pull the look together, you get a simple five-color palette you can use as a starting point.

The palette is based on practical color matching logic: nearby tones for an easy, polished look, contrast colors when the outfit needs a little more interest, and neutral anchors so the result still feels wearable. You can also copy any swatch as a hex code, which is handy if you are planning outfits for photos, shopping online, building a mood board, or matching a color across clothes and accessories.

Use it for questions like:

  • What colors go with a burgundy dress?
  • What shoes match a navy outfit?
  • What bag color works with beige clothes?
  • What nail color should I wear with a green outfit?
  • How do I build an outfit color palette that looks intentional?

You do not have to follow the palette exactly. Think of it as a good first draft. If one color feels too bold for your style, swap it for a softer version. If you like simple outfits, use the palette mainly for accessories. If you like statement looks, let the contrast color do more work.

Nail color matcher

The nail color matcher helps you choose nail polish colors based on your skin tone. Select fair, light, medium, olive, tan, or deep skin, and the tool suggests nail shades that usually complement that tone instead of fighting against it.

This is especially useful when you want a manicure that looks good with your hands, not just good in the bottle. Some colors look amazing on the shelf and then feel too chalky, too orange, too grey, or too harsh once they are on your nails. Skin tone makes a big difference.

The matcher gives you a practical set of shades, including everyday neutrals, soft pinks, warm corals, berries, browns, reds, plums, and deeper tones depending on the skin tone selected. You can use the swatches as shopping references, salon inspiration, or quick color ideas before a wedding, vacation, photoshoot, date night, job interview, or everyday manicure.

It is good for questions like:

  • What nail colors look good on fair skin?
  • What nail polish suits olive skin?
  • What nude nail color should I choose?
  • What nail color goes with tan skin?
  • What manicure color works with deep skin tones?
  • What nail shade should I wear with my outfit?

The answer is not one perfect color forever. Lighting, outfit colors, jewelry, season, and personal taste all matter. But starting with colors that already suit your skin tone makes the decision much easier.

How to use the fashion tools together

The easiest way to plan a full look is to start with the item you already know you are wearing.

If you have a dress, suit, shirt, coat, pair of trousers, or shoes in mind, open the outfit color palette generator and set that as your base color. The tool will suggest related colors for the rest of the outfit. Then use the nail color suggestion as either the nail color itself or as a clue for your makeup, bag, or accessory direction.

For example, if your base color is emerald green, the palette might push you toward grounded accessories and a nail color that keeps the outfit from feeling too busy. If your base is soft blush, you might get gentle neutrals and warmer accent colors. If your base is black, the palette can help you avoid the "everything is black because I gave up" look by adding one controlled accent.

Here is a simple styling workflow:

1. Choose the main outfit color. 2. Generate a matching outfit palette. 3. Pick one accent color, not five. 4. Match shoes or bag to a neutral from the palette. 5. Choose a nail color that works with both your skin tone and the outfit. 6. Check the whole look in natural light before you commit.

That last step matters. Colors can look different under bathroom lighting, shop lighting, office lighting, and daylight. A nail color that looks warm indoors can turn cooler outside. A cream top can look yellow next to white trousers. A black bag can look too heavy with a soft pastel dress. The tools get you close quickly, then real light gives you the final check.

Outfit color matching basics

You do not need to memorize a color wheel to dress well, but a few simple ideas help.

Neutrals make color easier

Black, white, cream, grey, navy, denim, camel, tan, chocolate, and metallics are the support system of most outfits. If your main piece is colorful, neutrals keep the look grounded. If your outfit is mostly neutral, one color accent can make it feel styled rather than plain.

This is why a bright red dress can work with nude heels, black heels, gold jewelry, or a burgundy manicure. The strong color is already doing the talking. The rest of the outfit does not need to compete.

Similar colors feel calm

Colors that sit near each other usually create a softer, more blended look. Think sage green with olive, blush with rose, cream with beige, navy with denim blue, or chocolate brown with camel.

This is a good approach when you want an outfit to look expensive, relaxed, or put together without being loud. Tonal dressing works because the colors feel related, even when the pieces are different textures.

Contrast adds energy

Contrast is what makes an outfit pop. Navy with white. Pink with red. Green with cream. Black with silver. Brown with blue denim. A little contrast can make a simple outfit feel deliberate.

The trick is controlling how much contrast you use. If the outfit already has a bold print, bright color, shiny fabric, or statement silhouette, keep the accessories calmer. If the outfit is very simple, a contrast bag, shoe, nail color, or lipstick can do the work.

Repeating a color makes an outfit look finished

One of the easiest styling tricks is to repeat a color in two places. Brown belt and brown shoes. Silver earrings and silver bag hardware. Burgundy nails and a burgundy lip. Cream jacket and cream bag.

The repeat does not have to be exact. It just has to feel connected. This is often the difference between "I put clothes on" and "I styled this."

How to choose nail colors for outfits

Nails are small, but they change the feel of a look. A pale nude manicure makes an outfit cleaner. A red manicure makes it more classic. A dark plum or chocolate shade makes it moodier. A sheer pink keeps things soft. A metallic shade can make the whole outfit feel more dressed up.

For everyday outfits, nails can be quiet:

  • sheer pink
  • soft nude
  • milky white
  • beige
  • light mauve
  • pale peach

For polished work outfits, nails usually look best when they are clean and controlled:

  • nude matched to your skin tone
  • rose beige
  • soft taupe
  • muted berry
  • classic red
  • deep brown

For evening outfits, nails can carry more drama:

  • wine
  • burgundy
  • espresso
  • plum
  • black cherry
  • metallic gold
  • deep red

For vacation or summer outfits, brighter colors feel more natural:

  • coral
  • hot pink
  • orange-red
  • turquoise
  • lilac
  • bright white

The best nail color is not always the one that exactly matches your clothes. Sometimes exact matching looks too forced. A related shade often looks better: rose nails with a pink dress, burgundy nails with a red outfit, chocolate nails with a camel coat, or soft nude nails with a colorful printed dress.

Common fashion color questions

What colors go with black?

Almost everything goes with black, but the mood changes fast. Black with white is sharp and classic. Black with beige or camel feels softer. Black with red is bold. Black with silver feels modern. Black with gold feels warmer and dressier. If an all-black outfit feels flat, add texture: leather, knit, satin, denim, ribbing, suede, or metal hardware.

What colors go with white or cream?

White and cream work with most colors, but they are not the same. White looks crisp with black, navy, red, silver, and bright colors. Cream looks softer with camel, brown, olive, gold, blush, burgundy, and warm neutrals. If white feels too stark on you, cream or ivory may be easier to wear.

What colors go with navy?

Navy is one of the easiest colors to style. It works with white, cream, tan, camel, grey, burgundy, blush, red, green, denim, and metallics. Navy often feels less harsh than black, especially for daytime outfits, weddings, office looks, and smart casual styling.

What colors go with brown?

Brown works beautifully with cream, beige, denim blue, olive, rust, blush, gold, black, and other browns. Chocolate brown is especially good when you want a neutral that feels rich but not as sharp as black.

What colors go with green?

Green depends on the shade. Sage green works with cream, beige, white, soft pink, tan, and gold. Emerald green works with black, navy, cream, silver, gold, and burgundy. Olive green works with denim, brown, cream, black, rust, and camel.

What colors go with pink?

Soft pink works with cream, white, grey, beige, denim, brown, and rose gold. Bright pink works with red, orange, black, white, silver, navy, and denim. Pink and red together can look very stylish when the rest of the outfit stays simple.

What colors go with red?

Red already has a lot of presence. It works with black, white, cream, navy, denim, gold, nude, blush, burgundy, and brown. For shoes and bags, nude, black, metallic, or deep red are usually the safest choices.

Fashion tools for real life, not perfect closets

Most people are not building outfits from a blank wardrobe. You are usually working with what you already own: the black heels, the brown bag, the jeans that fit, the coat you wear all winter, the nail polish you bought because it looked good on someone else.

That is why these tools are designed to be quick and flexible. You can use them before shopping, while packing, while getting ready, or when you are standing in front of your closet trying to make one item work.

They help with:

  • choosing outfit color combinations
  • matching clothes with shoes and bags
  • picking nail colors by skin tone
  • planning outfits for events
  • building a simple capsule wardrobe palette
  • checking if accessories work together
  • creating mood boards with copied hex colors
  • making online shopping choices with less guessing

You still get to use your taste. The tool just gives you a clearer starting point.

When to use these tools

Use the outfit palette generator when you are styling a specific color, planning an outfit for an event, matching accessories, shopping for shoes or bags, building a capsule wardrobe, or trying to make a statement piece easier to wear.

Use the nail color matcher when you want a manicure that suits your skin tone, need a nail color for a wedding guest outfit, want a professional-looking polish for work, are choosing a vacation nail color, or just do not want to stare at 80 bottles of polish and leave with the same shade again.

Use both when you want the full look to feel connected: outfit, accessories, shoes, bag, and nails.

A simple rule for getting dressed

Start with one main thing.

That might be the dress, the shirt, the shoes, the jacket, the bag, or even the nail color. Let that piece lead, then choose everything else to support it. Outfits get messy when every piece tries to be the main character.

If the dress is bold, keep the nails and accessories cleaner. If the outfit is simple, let the bag, shoes, jewelry, or nails add interest. If you are unsure, repeat one color and keep the rest neutral.

Good style does not need to be complicated. Most of the time, it is just color, proportion, and one clear decision.

Frequently asked questions

What are the best free fashion tools for matching outfit colors?

The easiest starting point is an outfit color palette generator. Pick the main color you want to wear, such as a dress, shirt, blazer, coat, or pair of shoes, and the tool suggests matching colors for accessories, nails, shoes, and bag. It helps answer practical styling questions like what colors go with navy, what shoes match a green dress, or what bag color works with a beige outfit.

How do I choose colors that go together in an outfit?

Start with one main color, then add one neutral and one accent color. Neutrals such as black, white, cream, grey, navy, tan, denim, and brown make the outfit easier to wear. Accent colors add interest, but using too many at once can make the look feel busy. A good rule is to repeat one color in two places, such as brown shoes with a brown belt or burgundy nails with a burgundy bag.

What color shoes should I wear with my outfit?

If the outfit is already bold, choose neutral shoes such as nude, black, brown, white, cream, navy, silver, or gold. If the outfit is simple, shoes can be the accent color. For example, nude or gold shoes work well with many dresses, black shoes make a look sharper, brown shoes soften casual outfits, and metallic shoes are useful for weddings, parties, and evening looks.

How do I match a bag with my clothes?

Your bag does not need to match your shoes exactly, but it should feel connected to the outfit. Match the bag to a neutral in the outfit, repeat a color from your shoes or jewelry, or use the bag as the one accent color. For everyday styling, black, tan, brown, cream, navy, and metallic bags are the most flexible. For a statement look, choose a bag color that contrasts with a simple outfit.

What nail color should I wear with my outfit?

For a clean everyday look, choose sheer pink, nude, beige, milky white, or soft mauve. For formal outfits, classic red, muted berry, rose beige, taupe, or deep brown usually look polished. For evening outfits, burgundy, wine, plum, black cherry, espresso, or metallic shades add more drama. The nail color does not have to match the outfit exactly; a related shade often looks more natural.

How do I choose nail polish for my skin tone?

Choose nail colors that complement the warmth, depth, and contrast of your skin tone. Fair and light skin often suits soft pinks, sheer nudes, blue-reds, and gentle berries. Medium, olive, and tan skin often works well with peach, caramel, terracotta, coral, bronze, rose, and warm reds. Deep skin tones can carry rich browns, wine, plum, bright red, copper, gold, and bold pinks beautifully.

What colors go with black clothes?

Black works with almost everything, but each pairing creates a different mood. Black and white looks sharp and classic. Black with beige, camel, or brown feels softer. Black with red is bold. Black with silver looks modern, while black with gold feels warmer and dressier. If an all-black outfit feels flat, add texture or one accent color through shoes, bag, nails, or jewelry.

What colors go with navy clothes?

Navy is a very flexible clothing color. It works with white, cream, tan, camel, grey, burgundy, blush, red, green, denim, silver, and gold. Navy often feels softer than black, so it is a strong choice for office outfits, wedding guest looks, smart casual outfits, and daytime styling. Nude, tan, brown, metallic, white, and burgundy accessories usually pair well with navy.

What colors go with green outfits?

It depends on the shade of green. Sage green works well with cream, beige, white, soft pink, tan, and gold. Emerald green pairs nicely with black, navy, cream, silver, gold, burgundy, and nude tones. Olive green looks good with denim, brown, cream, black, camel, rust, and warm neutrals. If the green is very bright, keep the rest of the outfit simpler.

Do I need an account to use the fashion tools?

No. The fashion tools run in your browser with no account, no email address, and no sign up required. You can use the outfit color palette generator and nail color matcher directly whenever you need quick styling ideas.