How Alta Daily Uses Meta's Segment Anything for Digital Wardrobe Management
Alta Daily is a digital wardrobe app. You photograph your clothes, and the app suggests outfit combinations on your avatar. The challenge: processing…
AI-processed from Meta AI Blog; edited by Hamidun News
Alta Daily launched an app that helps people rethink their wardrobe. Users upload photos of their clothing, and the system suggests outfit combinations on personal avatars, tracking selections to avoid repetition.
The Problem: 80% of Clothes Go Unworn
Research shows that people wear only 20% of their wardrobe. Alta Daily addresses this problem through digitization, but faced a technical barrier—they needed to remove backgrounds from millions of user-uploaded clothing photos to create a 'clean' look similar to fashion magazines.
Why Segment Anything Performed Better
Fashion photography is particularly challenging for AI. Images vary widely: mirror selfies, items on carpets, unpredictable lighting. White sneakers on a white wall, a blue dress on a blue blanket—classic challenges. Alta tested various models across eight product categories. CEO Jenny Wang explained that the team needed technology that could handle 'user-generated content inconsistency'—jewelry details, reflective surfaces, thin hangers, and people wearing clothes. Meta's SAM 3 consistently outperformed competitors.
Cost Savings That Matter
Wang admitted she was 'shocked' by the cost of external APIs—typically cents per image. Processing 20 million photos with traditional APIs would have meant catastrophic expenses for a young startup. SAM allowed Alta to focus on user experience while responsibly managing its budget.
- Savings on API calls instead of cloud services
- Local processing reduces dependence on external providers
- Scaling without explosive costs
- Quality handles 'messy' user photos
- Processing speed is comparable to or better than specialized APIs
Global Reach and the Future
Alta Daily is already present in the US, France, Germany, Mexico, and the Netherlands. The team is experimenting with Meta's SAM 3D models to create more immersive avatar interactions—essentially turning the digital wardrobe into an interactive mirror where clothes look three-dimensional and lifelike.
What This Means
This demonstrates how open-source models like Segment Anything solve real problems for consumer applications. Alta Daily didn't develop its own ML engine—they took a tool from Meta and applied it to the fashion domain. A signal for other startups: if you need to process visual data at scale, modern models are already battle-ready.
*Meta is recognized as an extremist organization and banned in Russia.
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