Clothing goals, not fashion noise

What do you want your clothes to do for you?

ColorSense works with what you have, what you may be missing, and the best way to build toward your clothing goals.

I want my clothes to help me feel better about the way I dress.

Start from the human thing: confidence, dignity, color, access, work, relationships, rotation, travel, expression, or a style someone used to help you keep.

01

Help me feel better about the way I dress.

Build repeatable outfits around comfort, proportion, color, and confidence — without pretending to be someone else.

02

Help me know I’m wearing the right thing.

For the day, the room, the weather, the plan, and the way you want to be understood.

03

Help me identify colors because I can’t rely on sight.

Plain descriptions for blind, near-blind, and colorblind users: color, contrast, pattern, and matching.

04

Help me be seen the way I want.

Sharper at work, easier at play, more confident around people, and still unmistakably yourself.

05

Help me tell the world who I am.

Build expression with restraint: more signal, less chaos, no costume, no hot mess.

06

Help me maintain a style someone used to help me with.

A gentle path for keeping taste, routines, and dignity intact after life changes.

07

Help me get more out of what I already own.

Rotation, outfit-building, gaps, duplicates, and smarter future buys from the clothes already there.

Look at what you have. Find what’s missing. Move toward the goal.

ColorSense works like a quiet clothing partner. It sees the garment, reads the situation, remembers what works, and gives the next useful action.

No fake stylist voice. No endless feed. No giant setup before value.

01 See Scan garments, colors, combinations, and outfits.
02 Understand Translate what you own into useful clothing knowledge.
03 Guide Wear this, pair that, skip this, add that later.

Proof, not vibes.

Point it at a thrift-rack jersey. A quick look sees a green shirt. ColorSense sees the piece.

A quick look Green soccer jersey

Cotton · about $15 · nice colors.

ColorSense Le Coq Sportif — Senegal Home Jersey, 2002

Green / yellow / red. Resale roughly $80–$180. The real piece, named.

Same photo. The difference is knowing what you’re looking at.

Color help is not an add-on.

For blind, near-blind, and colorblind users, clothing support has to be literal, fast, respectful, and useful.

That standard makes the whole system better.

  • Name colors and color families in plain language.
  • Describe contrast, pattern, and visible garment details.
  • Say what matches, what clashes, and when lighting may be affecting the read.
  • Support voice-first use without turning dignity into a feature.

Build toward what your clothes are supposed to do.

No spam — just an invite when your spot opens.