[ Use Case ]

Hybrid-work dresser

Office Monday. Café Friday. Same wardrobe.

[ The Read ]

Two days a week you need to look like you mean it. Three days a week you do not. The wardrobe has to do both jobs without two separate edits.

01

The pain

The hybrid week is a styling problem disguised as a logistics problem. The same trousers cannot read both boardroom-formal and Friday-casual without help from what is layered above them. You end up with a closet of pieces that work for one context or the other, not both, and the dead pieces accumulate.

02

What FVLBI does

Each piece in your archive is tagged for formality at cataloguing time: formal, business casual, smart casual, casual. FVLBI composes outfits that respect the day's required register. A blazer-and-trousers composition for the office days. A knit-and-trousers, or a knit-and-jeans, for the lower-formality days.

Trend chips on the stylist screen let you bias the composition further when the day calls for it: a specific colour, a specific style register. The composition redraws.

03

What this is not

FVLBI does not know your calendar. You set the register through the trend chips when needed, or accept the day's default composition.

04

A worked example

A pair of charcoal trousers in your archive. Worn with the navy blazer and the white oxford on the office day. Worn with the cream cable knit and white sneakers on the Friday. Same trousers, two contexts, two compositions. The wardrobe gets twice the work without twice the pieces.

The week splits. The wardrobe does not have to.