A capsule wardrobe is a bet: fewer, better pieces beat a full rack. WearStreak keeps the wear count per item, which is how you find out if the bet is paying off.
In a big closet, a piece that never gets worn just disappears into the rack. In a capsule there's nowhere to hide: every slot is one you chose, and every piece is supposed to work.
Wear counts are the receipts. One tap when you put something on, and over a season the closet sorts itself into the pieces doing the job and the ones just occupying a slot.
The hard part of a capsule isn't building it, it's the edit. Memory flatters the pieces you like the idea of, and that flattery is how a “small” wardrobe quietly grows back.
With a count on every item, the edit turns into a sort. Keep the workhorses, question the zeros, and make the call with a number in front of you instead of a memory arguing for the defendant.
Every capsule guide says the same thing: buy fewer, better things. Cost per wear is how you check that advice against reality. Add what you paid, and every item shows its price divided by its wears, dropping each time you put it on.
The good coat worn a hundred times beats the bargain worn twice, and now you can see it happen. Try the math yourself with the cost per wear calculator.
WearStreak isn't a styling app. It won't build outfits, score your looks, or show you anyone else's closet. It's the counting layer under whatever capsule method you already use: wear, wash, count. That's the whole thing.
No. It doesn't pick outfits, suggest color palettes, or tell you what to buy. It counts wears and washes per item. The planning stays yours; it's just informed by real numbers instead of a feeling about what you probably wear.
A capsule is a bet that fewer, better pieces beat a full rack, and wear counts are how you check the bet. They show which pieces are pulling their weight and which only look good on the shelf, so the next edit is a sort, not a guess.
Free covers up to 15 items, enough to track your core rotation or put one season's capsule to the test. Pro removes the limit if you want to track everything you own.
Yes. Items keep their full history, so when the coats come back out in fall their counts pick up where they left off. Over a year you get the real picture of what each season's lineup actually did.