AINAA Edit / Inside AINAA
How to Get the Best Recommendations from AINAA
To get better fashion recommendations from AINAA, complete your taste profile, then tell it the occasion, your budget in rupees, and the colours and fabrics you like. React to the first results, save the looks you love, and mention pieces you already own. Small, specific inputs produce sharper output.
Why specificity beats a vague request
A stylist who knows nothing about you can only guess. The same is true of AINAA. Ask for "something nice for a wedding" and you will get a wide, reasonable spread: a few lehengas, a sharara, maybe a draped saree gown. Useful, but generic. Tell it "a pastel organza saree for a daytime Christian wedding in Goa, under forty thousand rupees, I prefer cool tones" and the results narrow to pieces you could actually wear that afternoon.
The difference is information. Every concrete detail you add (occasion, time of day, climate, palette, budget) removes a whole branch of guesses. That is the single biggest lever you have, and it costs you one extra sentence.
Complete your profile first
Before you type a single query, fill in your taste profile. Your gender, the vibes you gravitate towards, and a handful of likes give AINAA a baseline to reason from. Without it, the first few results are cold-start guesses; with it, they arrive already tilted towards your colours, fits and price comfort.
Think of the profile as the briefing you give a new tailor. The richer it is, the less back-and-forth you need later. You can return and adjust it any time your taste shifts, say from structured tailoring towards softer, fluid drapes.
What the profile actually tracks
- Colours and palettes you reach for, and the ones you avoid.
- Fabrics and drapes, from crisp cotton and linen to silk, chiffon and georgette.
- Silhouettes and fits: high-waisted, fit-and-flare, relaxed, body-skimming.
- Formality and occasions you dress for most often.
- Your usual price segment, so suggestions stay in a believable range.
React to results, do not just scroll
The fastest way to better fashion recommendations is to respond to what AINAA shows you. Tap to see more of a piece you like, or less of one that misses. Each signal feeds the next set, so the results converge on your taste within a turn or two instead of staying broad.
Be honest in both directions. Pushing away a colour you dislike is as valuable as pulling in one you love. If a bandhgala reads too formal for the brunch you had in mind, say so; AINAA will swap towards an indo-western kurta set or a linen overshirt rather than repeating the register.
Name the occasion and the budget
Occasion is the spine of any outfit. A sangeet, a board review, a mehendi at home, a beach reception and a Diwali dinner all ask for different fabrics, coverage and colour energy. Tell AINAA which one, and the entire look is built for it: the saree weight, the jewellery scale, the footwear you could stand in for four hours.
Budget matters just as much, and it is often left out. When you give a figure in rupees, AINAA can spread the spend deliberately, putting more into the hero piece (the saree, the sherwani, the statement dress) and keeping the supporting items, like the clutch or the juttis, sensible. The full outfit then lands within your number instead of one item quietly blowing it.
- State the occasion and the time of day, not just the season.
- Give a total budget when you want a complete outfit, not only a single item.
- Mention climate if it matters: a Delhi December asks for different layers than a Chennai one.
Save the looks you love
When a combination clicks, save it. A saved look is more than a bookmark: it is a clear, lasting signal of what you find correct. AINAA reads your saved library as a strong statement of taste, and future suggestions lean towards those proportions, palettes and pairings.
Saving also keeps your own thinking tidy. Build a sangeet look one evening, save it, and you can return to refine the jewellery or footwear later without rebuilding from scratch.
Tell it what you already own
Your wardrobe is half the equation, and AINAA cannot see it unless you mention it. Say you already own a black bandhgala, beige block heels or a classic Banarasi dupatta, and it will style around those pieces rather than suggesting near-duplicates. You end up buying the gaps, the trousers that finish the bandhgala or the blouse that lifts the dupatta, instead of a fourth thing you nearly already have.
This single habit changes the quality of every recommendation. It turns a list of products into a wardrobe that works together, which is the whole point of styling.
Put it together in one query
You do not need all of this in every message. But a strong first request usually carries four things: the occasion, a budget, a palette or fabric preference, and one piece you own. For example: "Office-appropriate look for a client presentation, around fifteen thousand rupees, I like muted blues and structured fabrics, building around my navy trousers." That sentence does more for your results than ten vague follow-ups.
Key takeaways
- A completed taste profile turns cold-start guesses into results already tilted towards you.
- Reacting with more or less converges the suggestions on your taste within a turn or two.
- Occasion plus a rupee budget lets AINAA build a full outfit that actually lands within your number.
- Saved looks are a strong, lasting taste signal, not just bookmarks.
- Telling AINAA what you own means it fills the gaps instead of suggesting duplicates.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I get better fashion recommendations from AINAA?
- Fill in your taste profile, then tell AINAA the occasion, your budget in rupees, and the colours or fabrics you like. React to the first results with more or less of a piece, and the next set sharpens around what you actually want.
- Does AINAA work for menswear and ethnic wear?
- Yes. AINAA styles menswear, ethnic wear, contemporary western, footwear and jewellery. Name the occasion, such as a sangeet, an office review or a beach wedding, and it builds the full look across categories.
- Should I tell AINAA what I already own?
- Yes. When you mention a piece you own, like a black bandhgala or beige block heels, AINAA builds around it instead of suggesting a duplicate, so you buy the gaps rather than repeats.
- How does setting a budget change the results?
- A clear budget lets AINAA spread spend sensibly across an outfit, putting more into the hero piece and keeping supporting items affordable, so the full look lands within your number.