Discovering clothes from pictures is a simple task that can be done using websites like Amazon and LykDat, as well as specialized apps like GoogleLens, Pinterest, and CamFind. These tools allow users to search for fashion items by images, making it easier to find outfits without having to wander through shopping malls.
AI clothes-finders like LykDat can also help users recreate social media looks, find similar items to sold out ones, or find clothes seen on TV shows. For those looking for the latest trends, budget-friendly options, plus-sized inspiration, or simply to fill up their feed with inspiring fashion images, these tools are invaluable.
Instagram offers a variety of fashion advisors for any budget and style, including those of all different age ranges and body types. To find clothes from a picture on social media, users can tap on the image to see if the person who posted it has tagged any designers or brands. Shop looks curated by creators like LTK make it easy to find fashion trends, beauty, home decor, active, and gifts.
To find fashion inspiration on Instagram, follow accounts that match your interests, preferences, and goals. To shop, use the LIKEtoKNOW.it App on the app store and sign up to receive LIKEtoKNOW.it emails to receive posts straight to your inbox.
📹 HOW I TAKE MY OWN INSTAGRAM PICTURES! | Best Poses, Locations + Outfits For IG Growth!
HOW I TAKE MY OWN INSTAGRAM PICTURES! | Best Poses, Locations + Outfits For IG Growth! A B O U T T H E V I D E O hi …
How to find your own style of clothes?
The article provides seven tips for developing a great sense of personal style, emphasizing the importance of knowing colors, coordinating them, investing in timeless neutral pieces, being objective about body shape, taking creative risks, combining outfits with accessories, and becoming attuned to personal preferences. It also mentions the style of famous women like Audrey Hepburn, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and Coco Chanel, who emphasized personal interpretation of their style through selecting colors, cuts, fabrics, and shapes that celebrated their best features and spirit.
How to find an outfit from a picture?
PRIME AI provides a clothing search service based on image recognition, enabling users to expeditiously identify visually analogous garments by uploading an image of the item in question. Subsequently, the AI performs a comprehensive search of the product catalogues of all partner organisations in order to identify the item in question.
How to browse Instagram shop?
Instagram’s Shop feature allows users to buy products directly featured on their feed. The easiest way to use this feature is with the @shop Instagram account, which curates these products and allows users to buy them without leaving the app. Users can also use the Shop feature when they see a small shopping bag icon on an Instagram post, but sometimes they will have to visit the product’s website to complete their purchase.
Instagram’s Shop feature includes products offered by hundreds of brands and retailers worldwide, making it a wise investment from the social media platform. Launch the Instagram app on your iPhone or Android and search for @shop or other accounts with featured products.
How to search by photo?
To utilize Google Lens, navigate to Google. com, select the “Search by image” option, input the URL in the designated text field, and then execute the “Search” command. This tool enables users to gain further insight into an image or object in their immediate vicinity, such as a photograph of a plant. The results include objects within the image, analogous images, websites featuring the image, and analogous images. Google Lens is compatible with the majority of web browsers.
How to find an item from a picture?
To use Google Lens on your Android device, open the Google app or Chrome app, tap Google Lens in the search bar, and take or upload a photo to use for your search. Select the area you want to use and scroll to find your search results. You can learn more about an image or objects around you by using a photo of a plant. You can also search for objects in the image, similar images, and websites with the image or a similar image.
Is there an app that can identify clothing?
Google Lens is a widely used image recognition tool that can identify wearables, apparel, and personal accessories like jewelry and necklaces. It works directly from your phone’s camera, eliminating the need to capture a picture of the clothing or accessory. To use Google Lens, focus on the clothes you want to find online and it will present matched results. If an accurate match is found, it will highlight it with a blue icon, directing you to the Google Shopping page, which offers shopping links from various e-commerce websites like Amazon.
How to find your style on Instagram?
Emily Thompson shares her process for curated Instagram feeds, which involves looking around your life, finding common threads, choosing a filter that highlights your aesthetic, and pulling in your images to curate your look. She uses Instagram as an ongoing art project, cultivating a beautiful life through iPhone-ography and filter magic. Her feed, @emilym_thompson, can be found on Instagram. If you’re looking to create a pretty Instagram feed, Emily shares her workflow to help you find your Instagram groove. By focusing on common threads, choosing a filter that highlights your aesthetic, and pulling in your images, you can create a visually appealing and inspiring feed.
Is there a Shazam for clothes?
LykDat is a digital platform that enables users to search for garments by capturing images of the items they seek and uploading them to the platform. This functionality enables users to identify a range of online retailers from which to purchase the items. The homepage on a mobile phone is similar in appearance to the aforementioned case study photograph.
Can I take a picture of an item and find it online?
CamFind is a mobile visual search engine that uses CloudSight Image Recognition API to provide fast, accurate results for objects. Users can take a picture of any object and the app uses mobile visual search technology to identify it. The app is the world’s most accurate mobile visual search engine, allowing users to search the physical world without typing. The app is designed to be user-friendly, allowing users to quickly and easily learn about objects.
How do I find IG trends?
This video provides tips on finding trending hashtags on Instagram, including checking the Explore Page, using the hashtag autocomplete feature, using the social listening tool, following relevant hashtags, following influencers, and exploring websites with hashtag lists. Hashtags have been instrumental in social media since 2017, revolutionizing discussions, commemorating historical events, and raising awareness about social issues. Marketers and influencers worldwide rely on hashtags to find relevant content on Instagram.
The article outlines seven methods to discover popular and relevant hashtags on Instagram. While the Instagram app is sufficient for the beginning, external tools are needed to elevate your hashtag strategy. By following these tips, you can discover and use popular hashtags effectively on Instagram.
📹 How To Recreate Fall Outfits From Instagram and Pinterest WITHOUT SHOPPING | Shop Your Closet
Ciao everyone! For this week’s #shopyourcloset series, I’ve taken two outfit ideas from Net a Porter and Sezane and recreated …
This is really good information! I’m a newbie at the socials and I had questions and your website has answered and inspired! I did not think of using the tools I have the way you do such as iPhone pictures to recall locations. I’m a planner so this was excellent excellent info! Thanks keep bringing this type content!
This made my morning! Love this series so much and you are absolutely brilliant at recreating these looks after taking them apart … analyzing the different components. Soooooo GOOD! This one was especially meaningful as it took me down memory lane. When I started high school…before time began…(actually in the early SEVENTIES) my mother took me shopping for new Fall outfits and school supplies. I was just beginning to notice fashion in 8th grade…and my first party dress and graduation dress were big deals. Now..the entry into High School. I ended up with two outfits, but another skirt was added….so three. The first was a 3 piece suit (with a vest) almost identical to your inspiration suit today. The other pieces were high waisted green elephant pants in a knit with a cropped sweater to match. I had tan suede pair of shoes in the style of the net-a-porter pair shown. My mother also purchased a mini skirt for me. I loved these outfits and they certainly helped with my transition into a new chapter of my life. Later in the 1990’s or early 2000’s…when I was working 3 jobs to keep pace with raising property taxes on my home….I could not afford much in the line of clothing. This was the case most of my life. I saw a chic black knit suit at Chicos. It was described as Parisian. It had a long black jacket with matching pants. It was a little over 100.00, but inside my budget…it may as well have been 10,000. Mom to the rescue…I found it under the Christmas tree. I still have that suit.
You got my thumbs up for the retailers’ photo inspiration. It helps us see their photos from the perspective of “shop my closet” instead of “I need to have this in my closet”. It’s a very small change, but it does help to reinforce that mindset of buying consciously/ not trying to solve everything with a purchase. Just a thought 💜
I really appreciated your experimental approach which IMHO was refreshing and relative to most of your subscribers who most likely can only recreate these looks from our own closets as opposed to high end clothiers. You absolutely nailed the suit! The second look may have been enhanced with a long black cardigan? Either way, another pleasurable way to spend a dozen fashion minutes perusal you!
The olive shirt with the gold jewellery is 👌. I thrifted a khaki shirt dress and intend to wear it with gold or rose gold jewellery, too.😌 You are so good at shopping your own wardrobe. I become better and better at it, thanks to you and my other fav fashion youtubers, like Use Less, Audrey Coyne etc. 🤗
Hey Alyssa. Great idea with recreating a retailer’s look. That look is something we see on the big advertisement banners and try to figure out how to recreate it in normal life using clothes for normal prize or old clothes. I liked the first look much more. And even thought about a black shirt underneath the cream sweater for the contrast. The second look in my opinion would look better with a black men’s blazer that you have.
Love your take on the suit!! I agree about the feeling of the shirt AND the sweater AND the jacket…too bulky for me! Still lived the other look, even though the length of the jacket was a departure from the original. I have some heavier long/duster cardigans that I might try in recreating the original look. Overall, really love these articles!!!
Good job, as usual… I am an Italian 60 years old lady and ran into your articles recently. In few weeks you made me pay much more attention to consciuos shopping and I thank you for that. One question: when you ripropose the outfits, could you add some hints for overweight women like me? Unfortunately, tucked shorts, shorts, belts are not the best options for us…Kisses from Milano.
Loved both looks! I love the way you styled the second look. In the end, your personal style is as good as anything you can find on line! I am trying to restyle my pieces in different ways I.e. not wear them always the same way. My daughters tell me that I always wear certain pieces together. They are my uniforms but it’s fun to mix things up. Thanks for your always amazing style and inspiration!💚!,
I really like the men style suiting that popular now. I been thrifting a lot of men suits with some great pattern. I also will pick up a vest during my thrifting here and there. I may have to start dressing for work at home because it does not look like we going anywhere anytime soon. Enjoyed your take on this styling. I like your recreation on the first outfit. Thanks for sharing and blessing to you and all in the days to come.
This is a great series to help us be inspired by online looks! I actually have a similar vintage blazer and sweater vest for the first one and am excited to recreate what is an English vintage Ralph Lauren type of look. Love to see how you make your own versions and they both turned out super cute and wearable! I think the biggest challenge I have had was to find out how to translate looks from online to work with my body type (pear and long torso.) I’m thin but still can’t just put any look together. Thanks for the article ❤️
Alyssa, I started following u since the pandemic started and love u already!!! I left my other blogger for u😍, and that’s a grear deal because every time she put a new article I used to tell my 4 sisters: my friend said we should wear this, etc. So now they have to hear me say: my friend Alyssa teached me this😜. I love ur personality, ur taste in fashion. Receive all this love💞 from this lady from Puerto Rico, living now in Orlando, Florida. BRAVO!!!
Hi Alyessa. Your first outfit looks more mature and classy than the model. She looks like a student, nothing wrong with that, however, your plain items look more sophisticated. I know she didn’t have a purse but I was wondering which purse you would have chosen. I always like your outfit choices better. I thought you had a long black coat. Great article.
Bonjour Alyssa, j’aime beaucoup tes vidéos que je regarde chaque semaine. Un petit détail ton regard est un peu trop ´haut’. Tu ne me « regardes » pas. Je ne sais pas si je suis claire. Comme je me fais la réflexion à chaque fois je me permets de te l’écrire en toute bienveillance. Belle journée! Manuella
Bonjour I will forever love this series! A big thank you for them. It’s a great idea to also use retailer inspirational/commercial photos instead of Pinterest ones. However, and I spek as a French, I feel obligated to tell that Sézane is overrated. Not only are they greenwashing all over the place but the quality is not worth the price tag, in my opinion. LOVE their style though.
Just wanted to let you know that this article (and seeing that you have loads of others like it) made me subscribe to your website. I was looking for more “shop your closet” inspiration to encourage my brain to first think of using what I have. I’m on a low-buy no-buy this year, so I’m practicing contentment, gratitude, and being creative. Your website is both encouraging and inspirational! Thanks 😊 By the way, I don’t follow the trends at all anymore, but I liked that this article might reflect the looks I’ll see around. And it’s almost fall, so fall is on the mind.
Hello!☺ I liked both looks but the first is my favorite (it’s closer to my vibe). I love how you go through this process even when it doesn’t turn out exactly as expected. I think part of the fun, personal growth, revelation, and refinement of our style comes from not just nailing it, but our mishaps as well. Somewhere between those little “ah-ha” moments and “oh dear” moments is when we sometimes find that sweet space! Great job! ❤
Oh Alyssa, you gave me such a great idea. I have a short sleeve loose knit summer top in light beige that I never wear anymore, I was on the verge of donating it this morning, but I think it would look just wonderful over a white shirt. Thank you for that idea, I can certainly put a camel jacket and slacks on with it, and stretch my wardrobe options. Wow, just wow. Thank you for making me see my wardrobe in a new light. I even have a pair of Cole Han tasseled light brown shoes to go with the outfit. BTW, I got rid of my cropped black culottes last year… 🙁 It is hard to know what to keep and what to donate/toss when you are decluttering your closet.
The 1st recreation looked great. Not overly busy like the retailer look. The 2nd outfit by your own admission, was a miss. The retailer outfit was drab, and everything about it pulled downward, including her hairdo. I don’t know why you choose it, because your style is more Interesting than what the retailer offered.
Oh my goodness, I thought you had the culottes. In my head while you were deconstructing the 2nd outfit elements, I was thinking “Her culottes would be great with that.” Ha. I really liked your first outfit, felt on point with the first inspiration’s vibe. But then, that suit of yours always looks fantastic.
I like the camel pants suit with the white knit vest and socks…not quite as interesting as the hounds tooth suit with the bold vest, but pleasing to the eye. I thought the second outfit was a winner, too, even with the shorter jacket. I have an earth-tone hounds tooth blazer and a brown (but not striped, unfortunately) sweater vest and I am going to try wearing them this fall (had almost forgotten about them!). Thanks, Alyssa…always inspiring!
Love the use of retailer outfits here! It can be harder to break down their looks than a standard instagram shot. I just thought of a spin-off idea for this series (or maybe it’s more of an evolution?) – recreating an instagram/pinterest look from multiple people’s closet! I think it’d really help and be super interesting to demonstrate how to use the way you break down the looks for different wardrobes and body shape limitations! Of course it’d be hard to execute this idea right now with covid and all that but it’d be cool if you could try this one day? Bonus points for more editorial/less mainstream looks!
Even though I predominantly shop second hand, I will not purchase the items unless I can wear them with at least 3 items I currently have in my collection. For me personally, it is getting better use of all the items in my collection. I have been able to add classic pieces of finer quality garments extending my wardrobe in time as well as outfits for wear.
I’ve been perusal a few of your articles of late: how any items of clothing would you say you have in your wardrobe? And how many of them do you wear more than once a year? I need to invest in a whole new wardrobe, and would love to know how many pieces are the working minimum to create a sustainable, reusable, all season selection.
love this series of yours, and I think that even without the exact pieces you nailed a feeling in the earth tone 70’s glam prep look 🙂 I can’t rock those colours so much with a less-warm, more-neutral skin tone, but i am imagining how to replicate the general look, and appreciating the colours (from a distance, ha!)