Body Silhouette and Proportion Analysis
The foundation of any style blueprint is your proportional geometry — shoulder width, hip width, waist definition, torso-to-leg ratio. This drives your outfit architecture: the specific rules about silhouettes, cuts, fabrics, and structural details that create visual harmony with your frame. This is not generic body type advice; it is proportional logic that lets you evaluate any garment on the spot.
Posture Assessment and Corrective Plan
Posture is the most overlooked variable in personal style. Rounded shoulders change how jacket shoulders fall; anterior pelvic tilt changes how trousers sit; forward head posture changes how a collar frames your face. A complete blueprint identifies your specific deviations and provides three targeted corrective exercises — often the single highest-leverage improvement available, and completely free to apply.
Face Shape, Facial Phenotype, and Aesthetic Archetype
Beyond the basic oval/round/square classification, a full blueprint maps your mid-face ratio, jawline definition, and profile geometry to produce specific hairstyle recommendations — not vague categories but actual cut descriptions with styling guidance. The facial phenotype layer goes deeper: it identifies your anthropological bone structure type and maps it to an aesthetic archetype like "The Rugged Architect" or "The Scholar," giving your style a coherent visual identity.
Color Season, HEX Palette, and Power Color
Your skin undertone, depth, and contrast determine which colors make you look vital and which make you look tired. The blueprint produces a full HEX color palette organized into neutrals, accent colors, and your Power Color — the single strongest shade for your complexion. Most people who go through color analysis report it completely changes how they shop.
Style Archetype and Repeatable Outfit Formulas
Your dominant style archetype — Classic, Romantic, Dramatic, Natural, or Creative — is the connective tissue that makes individual outfit choices add up to a coherent personal style. From it, the blueprint derives repeatable outfit formulas: the structural combinations of silhouette, texture, color, and detail that express your archetype while working with your body type and coloring. These formulas are the practical core of the blueprint.