Lekondo App Catalogues Outfits
Lekondo, an app that scans outfit photos and automatically catalogs items into a digital closet — likened to Cher’s Clueless system — gained rapid social buzz, with a post receiving over 6,000 likes in a day (x.com). The app’s automatic-item recognition is being presented as a quick way for users to archive and rediscover looks (x.com).
Lekondo, a fashion app that turns outfit photos into a searchable digital closet, is picking up attention as users post its automated outfit breakdowns online. (apps.apple.com) On Apple’s App Store, Lekondo says users can upload an outfit, get an “instant breakdown,” and build a digital wardrobe over time; the listing showed 75 ratings and a 5.0 score when it was last crawled. On Google Play, the app showed more than 10,000 downloads and 323 reviews, with an update dated March 24, 2026. (apps.apple.com) (play.google.com) Google Play says the app detects color palettes, places looks into style buckets such as streetwear, vintage, gorpcore, and monochrome, and lets users save items to a digital wardrobe by adding a product link or description. Apple’s listing describes the same pitch in simpler terms: document daily outfits, understand your style, and see what other people are wearing. (play.google.com) (apps.apple.com) The idea is not new: wardrobe apps have long asked users to photograph and tag clothes by hand. Lekondo is selling speed, with software that tries to identify the pieces and aesthetics from a single outfit photo instead of making users catalog every item one by one. (myindyx.com) (play.google.com) That pitch lands at a moment when fashion discovery is already happening through daily outfit posts, not just shopping pages. Crunchbase describes Lekondo as a company that turns outfit-of-the-day posts into a “living taste graph of fashion,” and the company’s own site calls it a “third space for fashion.” (crunchbase.com) (lekondo.com) Lekondo was founded in 2025 and is based in New York, according to Speedrun, the startup program run by Andreessen Horowitz. Crunchbase says the company’s founders are Mitchell Overfield and Yeng Tan, and that it raised a $1 million pre-seed round on July 28, 2025, backed by A16Z Games Speedrun. (speedrun.a16z.com) (crunchbase.com 1) (crunchbase.com 2) The app also leans into fashion vocabulary as much as closet storage. Lekondo’s site includes an “Ontology of Fashion Aesthetics” with more than 30 categories, and App Store reviews highlighted the app’s ability to “verbalize aesthetics” and track outfits on a calendar. (lekondo.com) (apps.apple.com) Its privacy disclosures say the app may collect personal information, photos and videos, and other data, while sharing some app activity and device identifiers with third parties; Google Play says data is encrypted in transit and users can request deletion. (play.google.com) (lekondo.com) For now, Lekondo’s appeal is straightforward: take a fit photo, get a labeled archive, and pull old looks back up later without scrolling through an unorganized camera roll. (apps.apple.com) (play.google.com)