Google has deployed a new store functionality fueled by AI to help you determine what the clothes you are interested can look like when you wear them. He is nicknamed “Try it” and is currently available in the United States via Google Search Labs.
To start, just turn it into the laboratory. Then you download a full -length photo of yourself and start looking for clothes in the Google Shopping tab.
When you click on an image of an outfit from search results, you will see a small button “Try it” in the middle of the extended version of the hold in the right panel. One click and about ten seconds later, you will see the outfit. It may not always be a perfect illusion, but you will have at least one idea of what it would look like you.
Google claims that everything works on a model formed to see the relationship between your body and your clothes. The AI can therefore realistize in a realistic, stretch and group the material through a variety of body types.
The feature does not work with all the clothes you may see, or even all types of outfits. The clothing retailer must opt for the program, and Google said it only worked for shirts, pants, dresses and skirts.
I noticed that the costumes and swimwear did not have usable images, but I could put my shorts on myself, and the costumes that looked enough for regular clothes were usable. The AI also did not seem to have a problem with the jackets and the coats as a categories.
Elvis looks
For example, on Google Shopping, I found replicas of the outfits that Elvis wore for her 1966 return and one of his combinations of the 1970s. In a few clicks, I could imagine myself dressed as a king in different eras.
It even changed my shoes in the all -black suit. I always wondered if I could remove one or the other look. The images are shareable, and you can save or send them to others from the Google Mobile application and see how your friends think your friends are.
Super summer
The details that AI modifies to operate the photos are impressive. I used AI to try a fun summer look and closest to a superhero costume that I was able to try. The original photo is me in a suit and a jacket with a bow tie and black dressed shoes. But the shoes and socks on the two images generated by AI correspond not only to what was in the result of the research, but they are shaped in my position and my size.
In addition, despite the wearing of long sleeves and pants, the AI found a way to show some of my arms and legs. The color corresponds to reality, but its imperfections are perceptible for me. My legs seem too thin in both, as if IA think that I jumped on the legs, and my legs in shorts have not been as hairless since I was 13 years old.
Aside from imperfections, it seems that it is an important part of the next era of electronic commerce. The awkward supposition of knowing if a color or a cut works for your complexion and your construction could be easier to solve.
I would not say that this can compensate for them in real life, especially with regard to dimensioning and comfort, but as a digital version of holding an outfit against you while you look in a mirror, it’s pretty good.
End unnecessary yields
Uncanny that some of the resulting images, I think it will be a popular feature for Google Shopping. I expected it to be strongly imitated by rivals in the development of AI and online retail, where it is not already.
I particularly like the way AI allows you to see what you would look like in more bizarre or daring looks that you could hesitate to try in a store. For example, the Paisley jacket and the striped pants on the left or the jacket and vacuum vest and the vest with Victorian pants on the right. I would hesitate to order a look and I almost certainly plan to return one or both even before their arrival.
Yields are a scourge on online retailers and tons of packaging and other resources. But if Google shows us what we would look like in the clothes before buying them, it could flourish in return rates; The retailers will run to register for the program.
It could also open the door to more personalized AI style tips. You could soon have a personal ai dresser, ready to give you a virtual adjustment check and suggest your next look, even if it is not something that Elvis would have worn.