Rose Gold
Warm metallic rose-gold — bolder than it looks, more wearable than you'd expect. See it on your own photo.


Sample preview — your own result is generated on your photo.
Who it suits
Rose gold reads as rose-GOLD, not dusty pink — there's a clear warm golden base under the pink tone, giving it a metallic warmth that reads well on skin with warm to neutral undertones. On men, it works best on medium to fair complexions with golden, peachy or warm-neutral undertones. Cool or very pale skin can carry it too, though a softer, more champagne-rose variation sits more naturally. It pairs well with lighter beard styles — a light stubble or closely trimmed beard in natural brown or auburn complements rather than clashes.
What to expect in real life
Rose gold requires pre-lightening on dark hair — the pink-gold tone won't deposit visibly without lifting the base to at least a light golden blonde first. On naturally lighter hair, a single toner application can achieve it. The color fades relatively quickly (4–8 weeks) because pink pigment molecules are small and rinse out fast. As it fades, rose gold tends to move toward a warm peachy-gold, which is actually a pleasant fade if you're not trying to maintain the exact rose saturation. Men with shorter cuts will see visible root growth quickly.
How this is different from a filter
A pink filter washes your entire face in rose tones, making your skin look rosy and giving you no useful information about whether rose gold hair suits you. Stylery renders the metallic rose-gold specifically into the hair — your skin tone stays neutral, your face stays yours, and you can actually see whether the warm pink-gold contrast works with your complexion and your cut. The real concern men have before trying this color is whether it fades into something they didn't sign up for — a peachy or dusty-pink tone rather than the metallic gold-rose they wanted. Seeing a realistic render first sets that expectation before you commit to bleaching.





