Agent skill
wardrobe-planner
Structured 7-stage methodology for planning wardrobe/closet organization based on First Principles Framework. Use when organizing closet space, planning wardrobe storage, arranging clothing and accessories, optimizing closet layout, or solving wardrobe organization challenges.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry/tree/main/skills/data/wardrobe-planner
SKILL.md
Wardrobe Planner
This skill provides a systematic 7-stage methodology for organizing wardrobe and closet spaces, based on First Principles Framework (FPF). The approach emphasizes observation over assumption, testing over guessing, and continuous improvement over one-time fixes.
The 7-Stage Process
Stage 1: OBSERVATION (Understand Reality)
Actions:
- Inventory contents - Remove EVERYTHING from the closet, sort by categories (clothing, shoes, accessories, seasonal items)
- Measure space - Record height, width, depth of the closet; note obstacles (pipes, outlets, structural elements)
- Analyze usage patterns - Identify what you access daily, weekly, seasonally
- Document current problems - Write down what doesn't work (doesn't fit, hard to reach, gets wrinkled)
Stage outcome: Complete item list, accurate dimensions, and clear understanding of current issues.
Stage 2: HYPOTHESIS GENERATION (Generate Options)
Actions:
-
Create 3-5 organization variants without judging their quality:
- Option A: Shelves + hanging rods + pull-out drawers
- Option B: Modular containers + hanging rods
- Option C: Combination of ready-made storage systems
- etc.
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For each variant, sketch out:
- Which zones will exist (everyday clothing, seasonal, shoes, accessories)
- Which elements are needed (rods, shelves, drawers, baskets, hooks)
- Approximate cost
Stage outcome: Several draft concepts without evaluation.
Stage 3: ANALYSIS (Check Logic)
Actions:
-
For each variant, ask questions:
- Will everything fit? (verify mathematically: volume of items ≤ volume of closet)
- Is daily-use clothing easily accessible?
- Is ergonomics considered? (eye level = frequently used, top/bottom = rarely used)
- Does it fit the budget?
- Can you implement it yourself?
-
Identify contradictions and risks:
- "This option requires drilling into load-bearing walls"
- "Shoe ventilation isn't accounted for here"
- "Door placement will interfere with access"
Stage outcome: Unrealistic options eliminated, 1-2 finalists with clear pros and cons.
Stage 4: PRACTICAL TESTING (Prototype)
Actions:
-
Create a prototype of the chosen option:
- Mark zones with painter's tape on closet walls
- Use temporary solutions (boxes instead of containers, rope instead of rod)
- Live with this prototype for 3-7 days
-
Gather facts:
- Time typical actions (find a shirt, get sneakers)
- Document inconveniences ("need to remove three boxes to reach the fourth")
- Note what didn't fit or what space remains unused
-
Adjust the plan based on reality
Stage outcome: Life-tested final plan accounting for real-world surprises.
Stage 5: IMPLEMENTATION (Sequential Execution)
Clear separation:
5.1 WHAT IS NEEDED (Requirements)
- Zone for 20 hangers of everyday clothing at 140-170 cm height
- Shoe shelf for 10 pairs, accessible without bending
- Closed containers for seasonal items
5.2 HOW TO DO IT (Instructions)
- Step 1: Install rod at 165 cm height, 80 cm length
- Step 2: Mount shoe shelf at 90 cm height
- Step 3: Place containers on upper shelf (200+ cm)
- Tools: drill, level, anchors
- Materials: chrome-plated rod 80cm, chipboard shelf 80x30 cm, containers 40x30x20 cm
5.3 WHAT WAS DONE (Action Log)
- Jan 23, 2026, 14:00-15:30: Rod installed, required 4 anchors, hung 18 hangers. Slight sag - add third mounting point.
- Jan 23, 2026, 16:00-16:45: Shoe shelf secured, fits 12 pairs (more than planned).
Key rule: Do NOT proceed to the next step until the previous one is completed and documented.
Stage 6: RESULT VERIFICATION (Audit)
Actions:
-
Check against requirements from section 5.1:
- ✅ Zone for 20 hangers present? → Yes, holds 18, room for 2 more
- ✅ Shelf for 10 pairs of shoes? → Yes, fits 12
- ✅ Containers for seasonal items? → Yes, 4 containers on upper shelf
-
Measure effectiveness:
- Time to assemble an outfit: was 5 minutes → now 2 minutes
- Amount of forgotten items: was ~20% → now ~5%
-
Document deviations:
- "Rod sagged → added third mounting point"
- "Containers too deep → replaced with shallower ones"
Stage outcome: Verified solution with documented results and adjustments.
Stage 7: EVOLUTION (Continuous Improvement)
Ongoing cycle:
- After 1 month: Assess what's not working, what can be improved
- After 3 months: Check if new items require zone redistribution
- With season change: Redistribute zones (winter items accessible, summer items up top)
Key Principles
-
Separate facts from opinions
- Fact: "I have 47 hangers"
- Opinion: "I need a lot of space for clothing"
-
Don't confuse "plan" and "reality"
- Plan: "Rod will support 30 kg"
- Reality: "Rod sagged at 20 kg" → adjust plan
-
Clearly define element roles
- Rod is NOT for storing shoes (even if technically possible)
- Upper shelves are NOT for daily items (inconvenient to reach)
-
Everything must be verifiable
- Not "comfortable closet", but "outfit assembly time < 3 minutes"
- Not "lots of space", but "holds 50 hangers + 15 pairs of shoes"
-
Act sequentially
- First main zones, then small details
- First testing, then buying expensive solutions
Summary
This is the FPF approach without jargon: systematically observe → creatively generate options → logically verify → practically test → carefully implement → honestly evaluate → continuously improve.
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