What Actually Happens in a Session
Each person gets draped in a series of fabric swatches while the analyst reads how the colors respond against their skin. Warm versus cool. Muted versus bright. The combinations that make eyes pop versus the ones that quietly flatten a face. At the end, every guest leaves with a digital color palette they can pull up while shopping, a clear understanding of their personal color season, and a list of shades to seek out and shades to skip. The whole process takes about 30 minutes per person, which means a group of eight is looking at a four-hour session worth building an afternoon around.
Why Groups Make It Better
Color analysis was always designed as a one-on-one service. The Frankel Filter figured out that it gets exponentially more fun with an audience. When someone's best colors land, the room reacts, and those reactions are the whole experience. The gasps, the instant comparisons, the "wait, that's why that dress always looks so good on you" moments. Everyone is invested in each other's results in a way that almost never happens with group activities. Add brunch or a charcuterie spread and it becomes the kind of afternoon people are still talking about a year later, not because it was a vibe but because they're still using what they learned every time they open their closet.
Who Should Book This
Bachelorette groups are a natural fit because the structure already centers one person, and there's something genuinely special about the bride getting draped while her whole crew cheers her on before everyone else takes their turn. Birthdays work for the same reason. So does any group that's into beauty, that hypes each other up, and that wants to do something together that actually means something beyond the weekend. Once everyone knows each other's seasons, the group chat doesn't stop. They're swapping clothes, tagging each other in finds, and shopping with a whole new eye. It's the rare party activity that follows you home.
👉 Book the Group Color Analysis Experience by The Frankel Filter