The Closet.
Snap a photo. The AI handles the rest: tagging, categorizing, even cleaning up the image so it looks like a product shot. You end up with a closet that's genuinely pleasant to scroll through.
We built an AI that does what your most stylish friend does. Except it's memorized your entire closet, checked the forecast, and won't ghost you at 7am when you're running late.
They want you to tag every single shirt. Color, fabric, season. You do it once, maybe twice, then stop. The data sits there unused.
The "AI" recommends the same rotation of five outfits. It doesn't know your closet. It hasn't looked outside. It's making things up.
Your photos look like a garage sale spreadsheet. The app works fine. It just doesn't feel like something you'd want to open.
Three screens. Each one does its job and stays out of the way. The closet holds everything. The stylist pulls from it. The trip planner packs it.
Snap a photo. The AI handles the rest: tagging, categorizing, even cleaning up the image so it looks like a product shot. You end up with a closet that's genuinely pleasant to scroll through.
Text it like you'd text a friend. "Dinner tonight, 28 degrees, somewhere nice." It knows your closet by name, checks the weather, and if the request is vague, it asks one sharp question before answering.
Give it a destination and dates. It pulls the weather for each day, picks outfits from your closet, and builds a packing list that doesn't have you hauling six shirts for a three-day trip.
Other wardrobe apps ask you to rate things. Thumbs up, thumbs down, five stars. Veyr skips all that. It watches what you put on your body and works backwards from there.
Wore the linen shirt three Saturdays in a row? Noted. Haven't touched the navy kurta since February? Also noted. Over a few weeks, these signals build into something we call your Signature Palette. It's a style profile written in your own habits, not your opinions.
When you say "office tomorrow," Veyr could guess. But office means different things. So it asks: meetings, or heads-down? One question. Then it answers. You can set the personality too. Some people want warmth. Others want efficiency. Four tones, your pick.
The longer you use it, the less it talks. It stops suggesting the pieces you skip. It leans into what you reach for. A good stylist gets quieter over time. That's how you know it's working.
Five screens from the app. Morning brief. Stylist chat. A trip to Goa. Your style DNA. The closet grid.
You favour clean lines and warm neutrals. Linen, cotton, tan and cream. You skip prints and reach for terracotta when you want a quiet edge.
Kurta for the office. Sherwani for a wedding. Linen trousers for Saturday. Veyr doesn't treat ethnic wear as a separate category you toggle on. It's just your closet. Everything lives together because that's how you wear it.
Temperature in °C or °F. A glossary that explains every tag so nothing feels mysterious. And the AI knows the difference between a Tuesday in Gurgaon and a Saturday in Goa.
"We didn't bolt on ethnic wear after launch. We started with it. The kurta was in the data model before the blazer. That matters."
We're letting people in slowly while we get the stylist right. No charge during beta. Invites go out Thursdays.