Outfit scanner app

A new app called Lekondo is trending for automatically scanning outfit photos and cataloging items into a digital closet, making outfit management feel like the movie Clueless. Users are sharing discovery wins and the app’s launch posts have drawn thousands of likes as people test its photo‑to‑catalog features. (x.com)

Lekondo, a fashion app that turns outfit photos into a digital closet, is gaining traction as users test its automatic cataloging tools. (lekondo.com) The app’s iPhone listing says users can “upload an outfit, get an instant breakdown, and build your own digital wardrobe over time.” Apple’s United States App Store page showed 75 ratings and a 5.0 score when it was crawled, and Google Play showed 10,000-plus downloads with a March 24, 2026 update. (apps.apple.com) (play.google.com) Google Play says Lekondo analyzes a photo for color palette and style indicators, then lets users save linked items into a wardrobe for future reference. The store page lists categories such as streetwear, corporate, vintage, gorpcore, sartorial, retro, and monochrome. (play.google.com) That pitch lands in a market where digital wardrobe apps have usually asked users to photograph or manually enter each item one by one. Indyx, a competing wardrobe app, says cataloging has long been the core step in closet apps and typically involves uploading item photos plus details like size, brand, and category. (myindyx.com) Lekondo is framing itself as more than a closet organizer. Its website calls the product a “third space for fashion” and says users can log outfits, build a closet, and explore a global lookbook. (lekondo.com 1) (lekondo.com 2) User reviews on Apple’s App Store describe the app as a daily outfit tracker that “automatically builds my digital closet” and say the style breakdown helps identify aesthetics and colors over time. Another reviewer said the app’s calendar feature helps track outfits. (apps.apple.com) The company behind the app is based in New York and was founded in April 2025, according to Crunchbase and a résumé page from co-founder Mitchell Overfield. Crunchbase lists Mitchell Overfield and Yeng Tan as founders and describes Lekondo as a discovery engine built around outfit-of-the-day posts. (crunchbase.com) (moverware.com) Third-party app trackers suggest the audience is still small but growing. AppBrain said this week that Lekondo had been downloaded about 20,000 times on Android, including roughly 11,000 downloads in the last 30 days, though those figures are estimates rather than company disclosures. (appbrain.com) For now, Lekondo’s appeal is straightforward: take a fit photo, get a label for what you are wearing, and watch a closet build itself from posts you were already taking. (apps.apple.com) (play.google.com)

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