How does a Style Audit work?
A Style Audit reads a full-body outfit photo at four layers (silhouette, palette, fit, styling) and names the closest archetype from five (classic, romantic, edgy, minimal, dramatic). The output is an editorial card with annotated callouts on the photograph and a short list of wardrobe-tweak suggestions.
The audit starts by reading the silhouette of the outfit (how the shoulders, waist, hips, and hem relate), the palette (warm, cool, or neutral, and whether the tones harmonise), the fit (proportion, length, ease), and the styling (shoes, jewellery, layering, accessories). Each layer is graded independently and then read together.
The five archetypes (classic, romantic, edgy, minimal, dramatic) trace to David Kibbe's 1987 book Metamorphosis and the earlier yin-yang typology work of Belle Northrup and Harriet T. McJimsey. Most wardrobes blend two or three archetypes; one usually dominates. The audit names your dominant and notes the secondary archetypes the outfit suggests.
The output card includes a single editorial photograph with annotated callouts pointing at the elements doing the most visual work, an archetype card with a one-line interpretation, and three to five wardrobe-tweak suggestions in a tasteful constructive tone.
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Get an editorial Style Audit from one full-body photo. Archetype named, callouts annotated, wardrobe-tweak suggestions in a stylist-friend tone.
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