Your skin should be clean and free of makeup, lotion, or toner. Your skin needs to rest for about 15 minutes before proceeding, as your skin may appear pink from scrubbing and make it difficult to see your true undertone. Different lightbulbs can affect your skin differently--they may give it a yellow or green cast, and interfere with the appearance of your skin tone. Choosing a sunny spot to look for your undertones will prevent you from misjudging your undertones.  Try sitting next to a window. If you have an outdoor seating area, go outside. This is a quick way to determine your undertones if your veins are visible. Hold up your arm in the natural light and determine the predominant color.  If you can't tell if your veins are green or blue, you may have a neutral skin tone. If you have an olive complexion, you likely fall into this category.  If your veins appear green, you have a warm skin tone.  If your veins appear blue or purple, you have a cool skin tone. Do you tan easily? Do you burn or get freckles? The amount of melanin in your skin determines how it reacts to sun exposure and can help you determine your skin tone.  If you tan easily and rarely burn, you have more melanin and you likely have a warm or neutral skin tone.  If your skin burns and doesn't tan, you have less melanin and therefore a cooler skin tone.  Some women with very dark, ebony skin may not burn easily but still have a cool skin tone. Try a few more tests to figure out your undertone. Looking in a mirror, try to see how your skin looks in contrast to the white paper. It may appear to have a yellow cast, a blue-red or rosy cast, or it may not appear to be either, but a gray color instead.  If your skin appears yellowish or sallow beside the white paper, you have a warm skin tone. If your skin appears pink, rosy, or blueish-red, then you have a cool skin tone. If your skin appears gray, your skin probably has an olive complexion with a neutral undertone. The green from your complexion and the yellowish undertone combines to create this effect. You can experiment with neutral and warm tones, since you fall somewhere in between.  If you can't determine any cast of yellow, olive, or pink, you have a neutral skin tone. Neutral tones can look good in foundations and colors on both ends of the cool/warm spectrum. Hold a sheet of gold foil in front of your face so that it reflects light back on your skin. Note whether it makes your face look grayish or washed out, or if it enhances your skin. Then try with a sheet of silver foil.  If the gold foil looks best, you have a warm skin tone. If the reflection from the silver foil makes your skin glow, you have a cool skin tone. If you don't notice a difference (both silver and gold are flattering), then you likely have a neutral skin tone.  If you don't have gold or silver foil, try laying gold and silver jewelry on your wrist, and notice which one is more flattering. If you have acne, rosacea, or another condition that might mask your skin tone, you can have a friend look at the skin directly behind the shell of your ear, as this area is less likely to be affected.  Have them examine the skin right in the little crease behind your ear. If your skin is yellowish, then your skin tone is warm. If your skin is pink or rosy, then your skin tone is cool If they have difficulty, they can try holding a white piece of paper near the skin. That should help them see if it appears yellow or pink. Your eye color can be a key to your undertones. Lighter eyes like blue and pale brown usually mean you have cool undertones, while gold flecks usually indicate warm undertones. For example, ice blue eyes usually mean you have cool skin, while honey brown eyes usually mean you have warm skin.
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One-sentence summary -- Wash your face, then wait 15 minutes. Find a natural light source. Look at the color of the veins on the inside of your wrist. Consider how your skin normally reacts to the sun. Hold a white piece of paper up to your face. Use gold and silver foil or jewelry to find your skin tone. Ask a friend to look at the skin behind your ear. Look at your eye color.

Article: Label accordingly, with the current date. Leave a 1" (2.54 cm) room at the top for expansion.
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Combine a cup of sugar and two cups of water in a medium pot. Bring the mixture to a boil, stirring constantly and allowing the sugar to dissolve. Allow the mixture to completely cool on the side. Add the mango pieces in freezer-friendly Tupperware containers. Pour the simple syrup over the mango. Freeze the mangoes up to 12 months.