Styl10

Closet organizer

Organize the closet you actually have.

Most closet apps make you upload everything, then never open the app again. Styl10 is different — the closet builds itself through the try-on flow, every piece gets a portrait of you wearing it, and the system shows you which pieces you stopped wearing.

Three ways the closet fills

No onboarding marathon.

You don't have to upload every piece on day one. The closet grows naturally as you save try-ons, paste URLs, and capture things you already own.
Save a try-on
Render yourself in a retailer URL. Like the result? One tap saves it to your closet — as Owned (you bought it) or Wishlist (you're tracking it).
Paste a URL directly
Skip the try-on and add a piece straight to the closet. Render-on-add fires automatically — you still get a portrait of yourself wearing it.
Upload a photo
For pieces that aren't on any retailer page — a vintage find, a hand-me-down, an old favorite. Upload a clean photo and the system handles classification + render.

Three states that mean something

Owned vs considering vs wishlist.

Status is the difference between a closet and a junk drawer. Each state has a specific job and the composer treats them differently.
Owned
Pieces in your rotation. These are what Outfit of the Day pulls from. Marking something Owned moves it into the active wardrobe.
Considering
On the fence. Renders eagerly so you can keep evaluating. Doesn't feed OOTD but stays visible in the closet view.
Wishlist
On the radar. No render until you promote it. Separate from owned so you can still browse pieces you might buy without polluting the active rotation.

The honest mirror

See what you don't wear.

The most valuable trick of a digital closet is showing you the pieces you stopped wearing. The composer tracks recency. Items that haven't come up in months become visible — either re-enter the rotation or be honest with yourself about whether they earn the slot.

Filter by what you need

Tops, bottoms, dresses.

Slot classification is automatic from product category — tops, bottoms, dresses, outerwear, footwear, accessories. Override when the classifier disagrees with you (a t-shirt got marked outerwear, a long cardigan got marked top). The fix carries forward into the composer.

Real renders, real people

The same engine. Their wardrobe.

Every tile below is an actual Styl10 user wearing actual clothes from actual retailers. No stock photography. No model bait-and-switch.

  • P-LAINFrom Diesel

    P-LAIN

  • Daydream CrewFrom Vuori

    Daydream Crew

  • Wit & Wisdom Skyrise Wide Leg PantsFrom Nordstrom

    Wit & Wisdom Skyrise Wide Leg Pants

Questions people ask

Before you try it.

How is this different from a Notion template or a spreadsheet?
Three things: every piece has a render of you wearing it (not just a thumbnail of the product on a model). The closet powers Outfit of the Day so the data actually drives a daily decision. The composer's stylist judge scores combinations across the closet, which a spreadsheet can't do.
Can I share my closet?
Private by default. Individual looks can be made public (they appear in /gallery), but the closet itself is yours. Pro renders carry a private 1–10 score that's never shared with anyone.
What if I have hundreds of pieces?
The closet handles it. Slot filters + status filters narrow the view; the composer pulls from the active Owned set regardless of how big the wishlist is. Bigger closets actually get better OOTD picks because the combinatorial space is wider.
Do I need to upload everything at once?
No. Three pieces is enough for Outfit of the Day to start picking. The wardrobe grows over time through try-ons and direct adds. Most users build to ~30 pieces over their first month.

Two photos. One minute.

See yourself in it first.

Three free try-ons to start. Upload your face and body photos once. Paste any retailer URL. Decide with your eyes, not your imagination.

Start Pro · $12/mo →

We never train on your photos. Delete anytime.