Dark Neutral - black (was dark ink and dark brown in my youth)
Light neutral - bright white (was cream-linen- in my youth)
Mid neutral - grey &tan (was jean blue in my youth)
Cold season accent - burnt orange and metalics
Warm season accent - coral red & navy---added some baby blue this year
Colour that makes you smile - citron and all metalic &sparkle
Power colour - bright (or fadded) coral, grass green, white, metallics and BLACK (not because it looks better with my personal coloring than the others listed but rather because I feel more authority, power (and safe, too:-)) when wearing it!).

I’m also a fan of restricted color palettes and had never heard of the one you use. I used the workbook by Into Mind a couple of years ago and liked her system for building a (seasonal) color palette. See:

https://anuschkarees.com/blog/.....r-palettes

I liked it because it allows you to personalize without restrictions, so it doesn’t matter if you’re heavy or light on the neutrals but you will still end up with a versatile mix and match wardrobe.

I’ve recently realized that I really like tonal color combinations and prefer my accents to be pretty natural looking, meaning metal jewelry or pearls instead of colored/costume, and no brightly colored leather for bags or footwear. So I’m going from there now. E.g. navy and denim blue are signature colors for me and with the right items I can create tonal outfits. With lots of blue I prefer a bit of an accent to make it pop: either a crisp white, or a contrasting camel or chocolate brown leather (colors that don’t look good near my face) or a copper bracelet.

So basically I’m evolving towards color capsules such as those that Angie uses

I’m surprised that for your ‘new’ colors, you are in doubt between light blue and pink, and jewel tones. They are wildly different :). Of course you can buy things in all of those shades. But for this case, maybe focus on the colors that you like to wear together with the other colors in your palette? E.g. light blue would make tonal looks with navy easy-peasy. Or would you prefer navy to play support act to a strong jewel tone?

ha, Liesbeth, that's a good point about my own palette - I am feeling jewel tones at the moment, but do have a few pastel blue pieces that I quite like - and I'm a sucker for pink (and my lilac Chucks!). As Smittie noted earlier, when you have a strong neutral base, it really is easy to add lots of different accent colors So I will probably keep that bit open