Text to Style: turn a one-line brief into a finished fashion concept
Describe the garment in plain language. Get back a polished, on-brand fashion design ready to refine.
Text to Style is the fastest path from "I’m thinking…" to "here it is". It’s trained on fashion specifically, so prompts like "oversized boyfriend blazer in oat wool with a hand-drawn block-print lining" produce a finished design — not generic AI art.
How to use it
- 01
Write the design brief
Be specific: garment, silhouette, fabric, color, era, print. The model leans on every adjective.

- 02
Pick a brand profile (optional)
If you’ve set up a brand profile, attach it — the output will pull from your saved color palette and reference garments so the result feels on-brand from frame one.

- 03
Generate four variations
Each generation returns four takes on the brief. They’re different enough to compare — same garment language, different proportions, fabrics, or details.

- 04
Refine or send to the next tool
Pick the closest one and either re-roll with a tweak ("same but in cream wool"), send it to Multi-Angle Views to see other angles, or to Try-On to put it on a model.

Tips
- Name a designer or era in the prompt to pull in a specific aesthetic vocabulary ("Maison Margiela early 2000s").
- Use the negative prompt field for things you don’t want ("no logos, no jewelry, no graphic text").
- Save winners straight to a collection — you’ll forget which generation was the keeper otherwise.
Ready to try it?
Open the tool now and run through it with one of your own designs.
Open Text to Style