Yandes & NikkiFrames
Yandes Yandes
Hey, I was tinkering with a project that lets you search for the perfect costume by describing the character’s vibe. Imagine an AI that knows exactly what piece of a costume fits a fantasy hero or a quirky sidekick. Thought it might be cool for you?
NikkiFrames NikkiFrames
Oh wow, that’s like a backstage magician! I’d totally love a costume match‑maker that reads my head‑spun vibes and pulls out the perfect cape or mask. Imagine me in a sparkly wizard robe, or a quirky sidekick with a mismatched hat—yeah, that’s the sweet spot! This could be my new obsession. Tell me more!
Yandes Yandes
Nice, glad you’re excited! So the idea is a web‑app that uses natural‑language input to guess your style. You type something like “I want to feel mysterious but not too dramatic” or “I’m going to a kids’ party, something playful and bright.” The backend runs a small LLM that parses that description and maps it to a set of key features—color palette, silhouette, accessories, material. Then it pulls a catalogue of costume pieces, maybe from an API that talks to a vendor, or even from a database of thrift store finds, and ranks them by how well they match those features. If you’re into sparkly wizard robes, it’ll pull up velvet sleeves, a hood, a cape, and a wand‑style brooch. If you’re a quirky sidekick, it’ll suggest a bright hat, a mismatched pocket square, or a funky pair of boots. I’d also throw in a quick visual preview so you can tweak the vibe—like a slider for “more dramatic” or “more whimsical.” The tricky part is keeping the model lightweight so it can run fast on the browser, and making the UI friendly for someone who just wants to click a few buttons instead of wrestling with code. Think of it as a personal stylist, but for cosplay. What do you think?We have produced final output.Nice, glad you’re excited! So the idea is a web‑app that uses natural‑language input to guess your style. You type something like “I want to feel mysterious but not too dramatic” or “I’m going to a kids’ party, something playful and bright.” The backend runs a small LLM that parses that description and maps it to a set of key features—color palette, silhouette, accessories, material. Then it pulls a catalogue of costume pieces, maybe from an API that talks to a vendor, or even from a database of thrift store finds, and ranks them by how well they match those features. If you’re into sparkly wizard robes, it’ll pull up velvet sleeves, a hood, a cape, and a wand‑style brooch. If you’re a quirky sidekick, it’ll suggest a bright hat, a mismatched pocket square, or a funky pair of boots. I’d also throw in a quick visual preview so you can tweak the vibe—like a slider for “more dramatic” or “more whimsical.” The tricky part is keeping the model lightweight so it can run fast on the browser, and making the UI friendly for someone who just wants to click a few buttons instead of wrestling with code. Think of it as a personal stylist, but for cosplay. What do you think?
NikkiFrames NikkiFrames
That sounds like a dream for any costume junkie! I’d love a tool that just asks “What vibe do you want?” and then drops the perfect hat or cape before I even decide on a color. I’m all about that blend of edgy mystery and playful sparkle—so if it can pull a velvet hooded cloak with a quirky, mismatched brooch, I’m sold. And the tweak slider? That’s gold. Imagine you can slide “dramatic” from 2 to 8 and see the whole outfit shift on a click. Plus, if it pulls from thrift finds, I’ll finally have that vintage “story” vibe without breaking the bank. Count me in!
Yandes Yandes
Sounds epic! I’m thinking we can hook the slider to a tiny style‑embedding model so the outfit updates in real time—just a flick of the thumb and the visual changes. For the thrift part, we could crawl a few popular vintage sites, tag each item with its mood score, and let the app surface the best matches. Do you want a quick prototype to test the vibe flow, or should we start sketching the UI?