What it does
Turn your real closet into a visual wardrobe. Snap each piece once, then keep everything organized by category so it is easy to find and easy to combine.
Your clothes become building blocks for new outfits, and the pieces hiding in the back of the closet come back into rotation.
There is a practical side that matters beyond styling: when you can see your full wardrobe at a glance, you buy less by accident. You stop purchasing duplicates, you spot gaps that are actually worth filling, and you make intentional choices rather than impulse ones.
Why it helps
Most people do not have a complete picture of what they own. Clothes accumulate across different storage spots, seasons pile on top of each other, and the practical consequence is that a significant portion of any wardrobe goes unworn simply because it is out of sight. A digital wardrobe changes that by putting everything in one visible layer.
The benefit reaches further than convenience. When you can browse your actual clothes the same way you would browse a shop, you engage with them differently. Items that felt invisible become candidates again. The cost-per-wear on older pieces drops because they get worn, and you waste less mental energy wondering whether you have anything suitable for a given situation.
There is also a slower, more structural payoff. Over months of use, patterns become clear: which categories are overloaded, which colours never quite work for you, what single type of piece would make the most combinations possible. That clarity is not something you can arrive at through memory alone. You need the visual inventory to see it.
How it works
Photograph your clothes
Add each item to your digital closet in seconds.
Organize by category
Browse by type, color, or last worn.
Build outfits
Use your real pieces to create new combinations.
What you can do
- See everything you own in one place
- Stop forgetting the pieces you rarely reach for
- Pack smarter for trips using your real wardrobe
- Make the most of what you already have
Tips for best results
- 1Photograph clothes flat on a white or pale surface so the app reads colors and shapes accurately when categorizing.
- 2Add pieces in small batches over a few days rather than trying to photograph your entire wardrobe at once, it is easier to keep going that way.
- 3Use the "last worn" filter periodically to surface items that have been sitting untouched, and schedule them into upcoming outfits intentionally.
- 4Before any shopping trip, scroll through your digital wardrobe first to confirm what you already have and identify actual gaps worth filling.
Frequently asked questions
What is a digital wardrobe and what is it for?
A digital wardrobe is where you bring your real closet onto your phone. You add your clothes one by one, organize them by category, see everything in one place, and use them to create new outfits.
How do I add my clothes to the digital wardrobe?
You photograph or upload your clothes and add them to your digital wardrobe in seconds. Every piece you add becomes an item you can use when creating outfits.
How many clothes can I add? Is there a limit?
With the free plan you can start by adding 15 pieces to your digital wardrobe, plenty to try it out. As your closet grows, upgrading your plan increases your capacity, so you can keep more of your pieces in one place. Your wardrobe grows with you.
Can I create outfits with the pieces in my digital wardrobe?
Yes. You can pick up to 3 pieces from your digital wardrobe and build new outfits with them. So your pieces are not just stored, they are actively used.
Does it help me see pieces I own but forgot about?
Yes. Seeing all your clothes in one place helps you rediscover pieces hiding in the back of your closet, so you make better use of what you already own.
Are the clothing photos I upload safe and private?
Yes. Your digital wardrobe is private to you; only you see the clothes you add. You can edit your pieces or delete them permanently anytime.
Why does it make sense to digitize my closet?
Because it makes deciding what to wear easier. Seeing all your clothes helps you put outfits together faster, stops you from forgetting what you own, and shows you more clearly what you actually need when you shop.


