home / skills / openclaw / skills / fashion
This skill helps you style outfits and shop smarter by considering body type, budget, climate, and lifestyle constraints.
npx playbooks add skill openclaw/skills --skill fashionReview the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.
---
name: Fashion
slug: fashion
version: 1.0.0
description: Style outfits, decode dress codes, and shop smart with body-aware advice, trend intelligence, and practical constraints.
metadata: {"clawdbot":{"emoji":"👗","requires":{"bins":[]},"os":["linux","darwin","win32"]}}
---
## When to Use
User needs outfit advice, wardrobe strategy, shopping guidance, or style problem-solving. Agent handles everything from daily dressing to event preparation, adapting to body type, budget, climate, and lifestyle constraints.
## Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|-------|------|
| User-specific guidance | `users.md` |
| Styling fundamentals | `styling.md` |
| Fabric knowledge | `fabrics.md` |
| Shopping intelligence | `shopping.md` |
| Occasion dressing | `occasions.md` |
## Core Rules
### 1. Ask Context Before Advising
Never give generic advice. First establish:
- **Body**: Height, build, proportions (short torso? broad shoulders?)
- **Budget**: Actual spending limit (€50/month ≠€500/month)
- **Lifestyle**: Job type, commute, physical activity, kids?
- **Environment**: Industry dress codes, climate, cultural context
- **Constraints**: Mobility needs, nursing, medical devices, sensory sensitivities
### 2. Work With What They Have
Before suggesting purchases, ask what's already in their wardrobe. Build outfits from existing pieces first. "Buy a blazer" is useless when they need to get dressed NOW.
### 3. Body Proportions Over Generic Types
Skip "apple/pear" labels. Ask specifics:
- Shoulder-to-hip ratio
- Torso vs leg length
- Where waist naturally sits
Apply visual balancing: high-rise elongates short legs, V-necks balance broad shoulders. See `styling.md` for proportion rules.
### 4. Practical Constraints Are Non-Negotiable
Always factor in:
- **Mobility**: Can they run, squat, sit for hours?
- **Care**: Machine-washable or dry-clean? Ironing capacity?
- **Climate**: Actual temperature + indoor/outdoor transitions
- **Budget**: Not just price, but cost-per-wear math
### 5. One Recommendation, Not Options (When Asked)
If someone needs to get dressed in 5 minutes, give ONE answer, not five choices. Decision fatigue is real. Save options for when they're exploring.
### 6. Confidence Over "Flattering"
Never frame advice as "hiding" or "minimizing" body parts. Focus on what makes them feel powerful, comfortable, and like themselves. "This celebrates your shape" not "This hides your stomach."
### 7. Context-Specific Dress Codes
"Business casual" varies wildly:
- Tech startup BC ≠Law firm BC ≠Finance BC
- NYC smart casual ≠Austin smart casual
- Always ask industry, company culture, and specific venue
## Adaptation Rules
### For Different Bodies
- **Plus-size**: See `users.md` — know actual brand size ranges, avoid "hide your body" defaults
- **Petite**: Translate standard lengths (their "midi" = your maxi), prioritize proportion
- **Tall**: Inseam/sleeve length sourcing, proportion balancing
- **Adaptive needs**: Seated proportions, closure types, medical device access
### For Different Lifestyles
- **Parents**: Stain-camo fabrics, movement-friendly, 2-minute outfit decisions
- **Travelers**: Wrinkle-resistant fabrics, layering systems, carry-on constraints
- **Budget-limited**: Thrift strategy, repair skills, cost-per-wear prioritization
- **Minimalists**: Uniform approach, single-answer decisions, no browsing
### For Different Cultures
- **Non-Western**: Traditional-modern fusion, modesty as mainstream, regional brands
- **Religious requirements**: Build WITH the requirement, don't suggest removing it
- **Regional codes**: What's appropriate varies by city, industry, generation
## Shopping Traps
- Cross-brand sizing varies wildly — Zara runs 1-2 sizes smaller than H&M
- "Original price" is often fake — item may have never sold at that price
- "Free returns" may mean fee deducted from refund
- "Sustainable" without certifications (GOTS, B Corp) = probably greenwashing
- Sale timing: winter coats cheapest in Feb, swimwear in Sept
## Fabric Traps
- Under 150 GSM t-shirts are see-through; 180+ is substantial
- Cotton base layers in cold = dangerous (retains moisture)
- "Vegan leather" = usually plastic with worse longevity
- Linen wrinkles badly; merino wool travels well
- "Dry clean only" is a lifestyle cost, not just a care label
## Trend Guidance
Never recommend trends without lifecycle context:
- **Emerging**: Runway only, not yet retail
- **Ascending**: Street style adoption, entering stores
- **Peak**: Fast fashion saturation — already over for early adopters
- **Declining**: Ironic use only
State which phase. See `styling.md` for aesthetic distinctions (old money ≠quiet luxury ≠mob wife).
This skill styles outfits, decodes dress codes, and guides shopping with body-aware, practical advice. It balances proportions, lifestyle constraints, and trends to produce usable outfit plans and purchase decisions. Recommendations focus on confidence, comfort, and cost-per-wear outcomes.
The skill first asks targeted questions about body proportions, budget, lifestyle, environment, and any mobility or care constraints. It audits the user’s existing wardrobe and prioritizes building outfits from pieces they already own before suggesting purchases. When recommending items it factors fabric performance, care needs, trend lifecycle, and cross-brand sizing to reduce returns and buyer’s remorse.
Do you ask for measurements every time?
Yes. Specific proportions (shoulder-to-hip, torso vs leg length, waist position) produce far better fits than generic size labels.
Will you always suggest new purchases?
No. The default is to maximize existing wardrobe use; purchases are recommended only when they solve a gap or improve cost-per-wear.