AI color analysis with self-uploaded selfie.
Verdict: Tonebook is the better pick if you want 12-subseason precision instead of broad 4-season buckets — built on a 24-color sub-season palette built to read every undertone across Fitzpatrick I–VI. Drape is better if tight focus: one selfie, one report is your priority. Tonebook backs its read with an honest-accuracy stance (we publish a runner-up season with a confidence delta instead of an inflated single-number “% match” claim), so you get a precise 12-sub-season placement plus wardrobe matching rather than a broad four-season bucket.
Drape is a direct color-analysis competitor — single-selfie report, season output. Tonebook differentiates on subseason depth and post-analysis utility.
| Feature | Tonebook | Drape |
|---|---|---|
| Color season analysis | ✓ | ✓ |
| 12 sub-season system | ✓ | — |
| Wardrobe / outfit matching | ✓ | — |
| Virtual lip preview | ✓ | — |
| One-time report option | ✓ | — |
Three things Tonebook publishes that most competitors don't: a a 24-color sub-season palette built to read every undertone across Fitzpatrick I–VI, a 50-locale localization footprint, and an honest-accuracy stance (we publish a runner-up season with a confidence delta instead of an inflated single-number “% match” claim). That last point matters — an honest analysis that shows you your runner-up season is more useful than a confident-sounding single percentage.
Tonebook scans a single selfie and matches your color season — including outfits from your real closet.
Get Tonebook for iPhone