A real stylist does not throw a pile of clothes at you and call it styling. That is closer to what many virtual try-on apps do. They show possibilities, but not always the right ones.
A good stylist works differently. They use styling theory, experience, and a trained eye to sort through what feels like endless options, then narrow it down to a few that truly work. Often, those are the pieces or outfit ideas you would never have found on your own, yet once you see them, they feel exactly right.
That is exactly what Wardling is built to do.
Give Wardling your profile and a photo, and it has what it needs to create a personal restyle recommendation shaped around you. Not just around a single item. Not just around a passing trend. And not just around whatever looks flashy on screen. Wardling looks for what actually works for your proportions, your goals, and your overall look.
But every styling session starts with a question: what kind of change are you actually looking for?
Sometimes you want to keep the basic outfit idea and simply make it better. Sometimes you want to explore new options while staying connected to the original look. And sometimes you want Wardling to push further and open up more possibilities.
That is where How Far Should Wardling Go? comes in.
This new Restyle control lets you tell Wardling how closely the new look should follow the outfit in your photo. You can choose Stay Close when you want to preserve the core structure of the look. You can choose Mix It Up when you want more freedom to shift the composition. Or you can choose Go Further when you want Wardling to explore more boldly and bring you a wider range of ideas.
Here is a simple example.
Say you upload a photo of yourself wearing jeans and a blouse.
With Stay Close, Wardling will usually keep you in that same general outfit logic: a pants-and-top composition. The vibe can still change, but the recommendation stays anchored to the basic structure of what you started with.
With Mix It Up, Wardling gets more room to swap item types and shift the composition. That same jeans-and-blouse photo might become a skirt-and-top look, or even a dress, depending on the vibe and what works best for you.
With Go Further, Wardling has the most freedom to explore. It might add a layer, rethink the outfit structure more dramatically, or switch the composition more boldly to surface ideas you may not have considered before.
It is a small control, but it changes the whole conversation.
Restyle starts to feel less like pressing a magic button and more like giving direction to a stylist who actually understands the assignment.
Great styling is not about generating endless random options. It is about finding the right option for this person, this outfit, and this moment. How Far Should Wardling Go? gives you a simple way to tell Wardling what you need, so the recommendations feel even more personal, more intentional, and more useful.
So when you Restyle, where do you land: Stay Close, Mix It Up, or Go Further?
