From grimoire
Designs repeatable outfit formulas based on color anchors, silhouette ratios, and occasion categories to reduce decision fatigue from wardrobe choices.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/grimoire:design-outfit-formulaThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Design 3–5 repeatable outfit formulas for each occasion category in your life, based on proven silhouette ratios and a unified color anchor palette — eliminating daily decision fatigue while producing consistent results.
Design 3–5 repeatable outfit formulas for each occasion category in your life, based on proven silhouette ratios and a unified color anchor palette — eliminating daily decision fatigue while producing consistent results.
Adopted by: The outfit formula concept is central to capsule wardrobe philosophy (Susie Faux, 1970s) and the "French girl wardrobe" approach that dominates contemporary minimalist style guides. Stylists for public figures (politicians, executives, celebrities) operate on formula-based dressing — Steve Jobs' turtleneck and jeans was an intentional decision-elimination formula. The concept appears in behavioral economics research on decision fatigue (Baumeister, 2011) applied to wardrobe design. Impact: Sheena Iyengar's research (Columbia Business School) shows that decision fatigue from large choice sets reduces satisfaction and increases regret. Applied to wardrobes: people with large, disorganized wardrobes spend more time deciding, feel less confident in their choices, and wear 20% of their clothes 80% of the time (Pareto principle). Outfit formulas ensure the 20% is the right 20%, reduce morning decision time from 20+ minutes to 2–3 minutes, and enable deliberate purchases aligned to the system.
List the contexts you actually dress for (not aspirationally):
Calculate the realistic percentage of time in each context. Most people's wardrobe should be weighted toward their most common 2–3 contexts, not special occasions.
A unified color palette allows pieces to mix freely:
Test palette cohesion: lay all your current clothes on a bed; can every top work with every bottom? If not, identify which items break the system — those are candidates for replacement or donation.
Personal color undertone (optional but useful): warm undertones (golden/peachy skin) are often flattered by warm neutrals (camel, ivory, olive); cool undertones (pink/blue-veined skin) by cool neutrals (charcoal, navy, true white).
A silhouette formula defines the proportions for an outfit regardless of specific garments:
Core silhouette formulas:
Assign 1–2 formulas per occasion category. The formula is the template; individual garments are interchangeable within the formula.
For each formula, identify which specific garments execute it:
Create a simple matrix: rows = garments, columns = formulas. Any garment appearing in 3+ formulas is high-utility; anything in only 1 formula is a candidate for removal.
Before committing to the system:
The test phase reveals real vs. theoretical versatility — what looks good on paper doesn't always feel right in practice.
Before buying: "which existing formula does this piece belong to, and does it replace or extend an existing garment?" If no clear answer → don't buy it.
Capsule wardrobe size targets:
npx claudepluginhub jeffreytse/grimoire --plugin grimoireBuilds a minimal, versatile wardrobe (25–37 core pieces) that maximizes outfit combinations and reduces decision fatigue. Useful for fashion, minimalism, or sustainability projects.
Provides UI/UX resources: 50+ styles, color palettes, font pairings, guidelines, charts for web/mobile across React, Next.js, Vue, Svelte, Tailwind, React Native, Flutter. Aids planning, building, reviewing interfaces.