Wardrobe Planner

0 0 Updated: 2026-07-19 15:26:00

Wardrobe Planner is a custom agent skill designed for AI agents, helping users efficiently manage their personal wardrobe. Core features include: clothing categorization and tagging, outfit suggestion generation, seasonal clothing recommendations, and shopping list planning. Users can use natural language commands to let the AI agent intelligently select outfit combinations based on weather, occasions, or personal preferences. Suitable for daily dressing, travel packing, wardrobe organization, and other scenarios, improving dressing efficiency and style consistency. This skill is based on an open-source project on GitHub and is easy to integrate into various AI workflows.

Install
bunx skills add https://github.com/dimonier/skills --skill wardrobe-planner
Skill Details readonly

Stop Staring at a Full Closet with Nothing to Wear – Meet Wardrobe Planner

Have you ever stood in front of your closet, packed with clothes, yet felt like you have absolutely nothing to wear? I know I have, way too many times. That's exactly why I got excited when I found this open-source project called Wardrobe Planner. It's an AI agent skill designed to turn your chaotic closet into a well-organized digital wardrobe. Imagine being able to tell your phone, "I have a business lunch today and it's 25°C outside," and instantly getting a perfect outfit recommendation. Sounds like magic, right? But it's actually just smart data management.

The core idea is simple: turn your clothes into data. You log each item's type, color, season, and style, and the system handles the rest. It categorizes, recommends, and even tracks your wearing history. No more morning panic or buying duplicates because you forgot you already own three black turtlenecks. This skill is a game-changer for anyone who wants to simplify their daily routine and make smarter fashion choices.

Core Features That Make Your Digital Wardrobe Actually Useful

Before you dive into the code, let's talk about what this Wardrobe Planner can really do. It's packed with features that address everyday pain points. Here's a breakdown of the most practical ones:

  • Item Management: Add, edit, or remove clothing items with details like brand, purchase date, and times worn. Never forget what you own again.
  • Smart Categorization: Automatically sort by color, material, style, or season. For example, group all your blue shirts together or separate summer dresses from winter coats.
  • Outfit Recommendations: Input the occasion and weather, and the system suggests combinations based on your existing wardrobe. It even avoids repeating the same outfit too often.
  • Wear History Tracking: Record what you wear each day. At the end of the month, you'll know which items are your favorites and which ones are just collecting dust.
  • Shopping List Generator: When you notice a gap in your wardrobe, add it to a shopping list with one click. No more impulse buys!

You might be wondering: do I need to be a tech wizard to use this? Absolutely not. The design philosophy here is simplicity and accessibility. Even if you've never written a line of code, you can get this running in minutes. Let me show you how.

Step-by-Step Configuration: Getting Your Wardrobe Planner Up and Running

Alright, let's get our hands dirty. The Wardrobe Planner uses a straightforward JSON configuration. Just fill in your clothing data, and you're good to go. Don't let the code scare you – it's basically a fancy shopping list.

{
  "wardrobe": {
    "items": [
      {
        "id": "001",
        "name": "White Cotton Shirt",
        "category": "Top",
        "color": "White",
        "season": "All Seasons",
        "style": "Business Casual",
        "times_worn": 12
      },
      {
        "id": "002",
        "name": "Dark Blue Jeans",
        "category": "Bottom",
        "color": "Dark Blue",
        "season": "Spring/Autumn",
        "style": "Casual",
        "times_worn": 25
      }
    ],
    "preferences": {
      "prefer_brands": ["Uniqlo", "ZARA"],
      "avoid_colors": ["Neon"],
      "max_outfit_repeat": 3
    }
  }
}

See? Each piece of clothing is just an object with id, name, category, color, season, style, and times_worn. The preferences section lets you set your personal tastes – favorite brands, colors to avoid, and how many times you want to repeat an outfit before the system suggests something else. Once this config is in place, the AI can start generating recommendations.

Want to take it up a notch? Add weather and occasion parameters. Check out this example:

{
  "request": {
    "occasion": "Formal Meeting",
    "temperature": 22,
    "weather": "Sunny"
  },
  "rules": {
    "formal_events": ["Suit", "Shirt", "Leather Shoes"],
    "casual_days": ["T-Shirt", "Sneakers"],
    "color_coordination": "Analogous Colors"
  }
}

Isn't that intuitive? You can even define your own rules, like "must wear a blazer for formal events" or "avoid dark colors in summer." The logic runs smoothly, and every morning you just tell it what's on your agenda. The rest is handled.

Advanced Tips: Use Data to Optimize Your Closet and Stop Overspending

Most people think Wardrobe Planner is just for outfit suggestions, but its hidden superpower is data analytics. By tracking how often you wear each item, you can spot patterns in your shopping habits. I ran a three-month analysis on my own data, and the results were eye-opening:

Category Total Items Avg Wears/Month Idle Rate
Tops 35 8 23%
Bottoms 20 12 10%
Outerwear 15 4 40%
Footwear 12 6 33%

I was shocked to see that 40% of my jackets were barely worn! That's the classic impulse buying trap – grabbing things on sale that you never actually use. Now, before I buy anything new, I check the utilization rate of similar items in my wardrobe. If the idle rate is already high, I tell myself to pause. This simple habit has saved me a ton of money and taught me to buy less, but better.

Another killer feature is the capsule wardrobe planner. You set a limit, like "I only want 30 core pieces," and the system automatically selects the most versatile and high-usage items. This is a lifesaver for minimalists, frequent movers, or anyone tired of clutter.

Make Wardrobe Planner Your Daily Style Companion – Final Thoughts

By now, you might be thinking this sounds great but worry it's too much work. Trust me, it's not. Start by logging your 20 most-worn items – it takes less than 10 minutes. Then, spend 60 seconds each morning telling the planner your plan for the day. After a week, you'll notice the difference. You'll discover combinations you never thought of, and your closet will finally feel like a resource, not a burden.

At its heart, Wardrobe Planner is more than a tool. It's a mirror reflecting your consumption habits and lifestyle choices. When you start treating each piece of clothing with intention, you gain a stronger sense of control over your life. Don't let your closet overwhelm you anymore. Give this planner a try, and you might just fall in love with getting dressed in the morning. Remember, great style isn't about having more clothes – it's about making smarter choices with what you already own. Your wardrobe deserves to be well-planned. Start today.