Guide

AI outfit stylist from photos: how to find what looks good on you

Most outfit advice starts with someone else's body. Pick My Fit starts with your own photos, then turns a normal style request into a personal lookbook you can judge before shopping.

Why saved outfit inspiration often fails

Pinterest, TikTok, Instagram, and retailer lookbooks are useful for mood. They show color stories, silhouettes, styling tricks, and current references. The problem starts when you try to move that inspiration onto your own body.

A great outfit on a model can fail because the scale is different, the contrast is wrong, the fabric is too stiff, the neckline competes with your face, or the whole mood feels like a costume. That does not mean your taste is bad. It means inspiration is not the same as personal filtering.

What Pick My Fit does instead

Pick My Fit asks for two photos of the same person, your height, and a style request. The goal is not to generate a random fashion image. The goal is to create a fast visual answer to a practical question: what direction could work on me?

The GPT checks whether the photos are usable, analyzes visible body line and color direction internally, translates your request into wearable garments, creates one 3-look try-on image, and then can search for close product matches from real retailers.

Why the output has three looks

A single outfit can be too narrow. Three looks give you range:

  • Safe: the most wearable version of the request.
  • Balanced: more personality while staying practical.
  • Trend-forward: a stronger interpretation that tests how far the style can go.

This matters because style discovery is comparative. You often understand what works only after seeing a restrained option next to a bolder one.

What requests work well

You do not need stylist language. Write the request the way you would say it to a person:

"Office but not boring, polished but not corporate."
"Date night, sharp but relaxed, no loud colors."
"Soft summer city look, comfortable for walking."
"90s West Coast relaxed, wearable, not costume."

For a deeper template, use the style request guide.

What photos make the result better

Use one clear face-and-shoulders photo and one straight full-body photo. Good light and a neutral pose matter more than studio quality. Avoid cropped shoes, mirror distortion, sunglasses, heavy filters, group photos, and dark or blurry frames.

See the full photo guide before starting.

Where Pick My Fit helps most

  • You have a vague reference but do not know how to wear it.
  • You keep buying clothes that look good online but not on you.
  • You want to test a bolder direction before spending money.
  • You need outfit ideas for travel, work, dates, parties, or a wardrobe reset.
  • You want product links after seeing the direction on your own photo.

Where to stay realistic

Pick My Fit is a recommendation tool, not a guarantee. It cannot feel fabric, confirm tailoring, control retailer inventory, or know whether an item will be comfortable in real life. Treat it as a fast personal lookbook and shopping direction, then check retailer pages for sizing, availability, shipping, returns, and final details.

Start with the look, not the cart

The core value is seeing a direction on your own photo before you shop. Product links are optional support. A good result should help you buy less randomly, search more clearly, and understand why a look works.