Comparison

Pick My Fit vs Pinterest

Pinterest is useful for inspiration. Pick My Fit is built for the next step: seeing a wearable version of the idea on your own photo.

The gap between inspiration and wearing it

Saved pins can tell you what mood you like. They cannot tell you whether the scale, palette, fabric, fit, and overall attitude will work on your own body and face. That is why people can save hundreds of images and still feel stuck when they shop.

Pinterest and moodboards

  • Other people's bodies
  • Abstract references
  • Endless scrolling
  • No fit or proportion filter
  • No direct bridge to your closet or shopping

Pick My Fit

  • Your own photos
  • Your height and request
  • Three wearable directions
  • Style logic shaped around visible features
  • Optional product matches after the final image

Marketplaces solve a different problem

Retailer catalogs and marketplaces are useful when you already know what to search for. If you do not know the direction yet, they create more noise: thousands of items, different models, different lighting, and no clear answer to "will this work on me?"

Pick My Fit is not trying to replace shopping sites. It is a step before shopping. First, build a direction on your own photo. Then search for products with a clearer target.

When Pinterest is still useful

Pinterest is still a good place to collect moods, eras, colors, silhouettes, and references. The difference is that Pick My Fit turns that raw inspiration into a practical lookbook. You can say "I like this kind of feeling, but make it wearable for me" and compare three levels of boldness.