Methodology

The Outfyt Score is built to be readable.

The score is a blended outfit signal, not a mystery rating. It looks at color logic, wardrobe repeatability, and whether the look fits the occasion.

Core variables

3 scoring lenses

Color Harmony, Wardrobe Versatility, and Occasion Alignment.

Goal

Useful over flashy

The score is designed to help real wardrobe decisions, not perform trend theater.

Output

Score plus explanation

Every score should point to why the outfit works and where it can improve.

How it works

One score, built from three human-readable layers.

Step 1

First, the system reads the outfit or wardrobe photo for clothing attributes and styling cues.

Step 2

Next, it evaluates the look across the three core variables instead of relying on a single aesthetic guess.

Step 3

Finally, it returns a combined score with short explanations so the result stays useful to a real person.

Not a black box

The score is built to stay explainable. It should feel closer to a structured style review than an arbitrary number.

Daily wardrobe context

Outfyt rewards looks that can live in an actual wardrobe, not just perform in a single image.

Design intent

The score is designed to help someone decide what works, what feels off, and what could improve next time.

Core Variables

The three signals behind the Outfyt Score.

No single variable wins by itself. A strong outfit usually shows balance across all three: visual cohesion, practical repeatability, and context fit.

Color Harmony

Measures how well the palette works together across contrast, temperature, saturation, and repeated color cues.

What it looks at

Dominant tones, accent repetition, contrast balance, and visual cohesion.

What usually helps

Intentional neutrals, controlled contrast, and repeated accents usually lift this signal.

What usually weakens it

Competing focal colors, accidental undertone clashes, or scattered saturation usually pull it down.

Wardrobe Versatility

Estimates how reusable the outfit is inside a real wardrobe instead of treating every look as a one-off post.

What it looks at

Layering flexibility, mix-and-match potential, season range, and how many other pieces can work with the look.

What usually helps

Modular basics, adaptable footwear, and pieces that can restyle across contexts tend to improve this signal.

What usually weakens it

Single-purpose items or looks that only work with one exact pairing tend to reduce versatility.

Occasion Alignment

Checks whether the outfit makes sense for the moment, including formality, season, and likely real-world use.

What it looks at

Occasion tags, formality balance, weather cues, styling intent, and whether one piece breaks the context.

What usually helps

Looks that fit the setting, season, and social expectation usually score higher here.

What usually weakens it

When one garment pushes the outfit too casual, too formal, or off-season, alignment drops quickly.

Improvement Logic

What typically raises the score

  • Repeating one color family so the outfit feels intentional.
  • Using pieces that can work across multiple outfits and seasons.
  • Matching the formality of the outfit to where and when it will be worn.
  • Making sure one statement piece does not break the rest of the look.

Important Limits

What the score is not

  • It is not a judgment of body type, identity, or personal worth.
  • It is not a demand to follow trends or buy more clothing.
  • It is not permanent; wardrobe context and styling choices can change the result.
  • It should be treated as guidance, not absolute truth.