'Rules Are Suggestions': This Fashion Founder Is Using AI to Eliminate the Industry's Massive Sizing and Waste ProblemsLaws of Motion founder Carly Bigi is building for the conscientious consumer who values personalization, inclusivity and sustainability.

ByAmanda Breen

Courtesy of Laws of Motion

It's mid-July, and the yacht on the Hudson is calledPraying for Overtime— an apt name for the boat hosting theLaws of Motionevent, where founder Carly Bigi and her crew's passion for beautiful, perfect-fitting clothing bubbles up alongside the Aperol spritzes at the bar. Bigi herself wears a vibrant pink romper that manages to strike the balance betweentotally chic and still professional, a throughline for the collection, and the pieces on deck: a rack of white with subtle feathers ringing sleeves and hems.

Laws of Motion's styles are modern takes on timeless silhouettes, but that's where any resemblance to other brands begins and ends. That's because Laws of Motion, which countsRent the Runwayco-founderJenny Fleissamong its investors, relies on data to help customers find the ideal fit and reduce the impact of fast fashion (there's an estimated92 million tons of textile wasteeach year, globally).

Related:This Fashion Founder's Company Will Take Back Any Piece of Clothing for Any Reason. Here's Why.

"It helped me embrace the mindset that rules are suggestions."

Putting tech at the company's core was a natural progression for Bigi. Growing up in Houston, Texas, with deep roots in theNASAcommunity, she learned to view "the present as a springboard for what could be possible in the future." "[It] helped me embrace the mindset that rules are suggestions," she tells雷竞技手机版, "and that just because something was done a certain way before does not mean that's how it needs to be done going forward."

Bigi began her career in management consulting, where she learned how to build andrun teamswhile identifying, defining and solving "some of the most complicated problems at some of the world's most complicated businesses." It's a skill set she's been able to put to good use at Laws of Motion — where precision and innovation are essential in addressing the fashion industry's giant waste issue.

"Fundamentally revolutionizing the apparel industry means revolutionizing the role of precision data within the apparel industry," Bigi explains. "And so Laws of Motion AI technology blends proprietary and complex computer visioning and learning tech with a very simple user interface to increase data precision and reduce friction in the buying experience."

Related:Address These 10 Common Causes of Customer Friction to Maximize Success

"Using just two pictures, no app required, it generates a 3D mesh of your body, and then will predict over a million data points."

What does the tech look like in practice? It's super simple — I tried it myself. I snapped two pictures of myself in dark, close-fitting clothing against a light background, and uploaded them to the site, where the tech anonymized the images and gave me my ideal microsize. The user-interface was seamless too: In a matter of seconds, I was back scrolling through the Laws of Motion collection, where any piece I added to my cart was available in that perfect microsize (there are 180 total). There's also an option to complete a 60-second fit questionnaire for those who'd prefer that route, and the results are the same. Both technologies predict measurements with more than 99% accuracy, Bigi says, mapping the data to 1,260 precision sizes designed to be height and shape inclusive.

"Unlike other sizing technologies that anchor in gendered questions such as bra size, our body scanning technology is completely genderless," Bigi continues. "So using just two pictures, no app required, it generates a 3D mesh of your body, and then will predict over a million data points that are then used to map your perfect fitting size while fueling ongoing sizingR&Das a whole."

Because everything is made-to-order, Laws of Motion is azero-waste, zero-inventory company, Bigi says, producing via its American-based supply chain. Additionally, the technology is "flipping the script" of core KPIs in the apparel industry: achieving a 1% return rate, increasing size inclusivity 20 times and generating a 70% higher profit margin compared to other direct-to-consumer brands. In the next five years, the brand will eliminate more than 4.425 million tons of CO2 emissions, Bigi says, nearly a third of what U.S. apparel brands are producing today.

Related:The Challenges of Automation in the Legacy Fashion Industry

"It's not the typical approach, but nothing we do at Laws of Motion is."

The brand's on-demand production isn't the only way it's redefiningfast fashion— it also takes a collaborative stance to make sure its offerings reflect customers' real wants and needs. "Our customers play a huge role in our styles and colors, and I'm in constant awe of the relationship we've developed with them," Bigi says. "It's pretty incredible to see that evolve. Our most recent product, the Moxie romper, which I'm wearing today, was inspired by endless inbound from our community."

“这不是典型的方法,“Bigi承认,“但nothing we do at Laws of Motion is, and we'll continue to launch new styles and collections monthly to really further validate our hypotheses of the multivariate relationship between women's proportions and perfect-fitting apparel."

Andfast fashionisn't the only problem Laws of Motion is committed to solving. Bigi is also determined to dismantle an industry that's conditioned women to identify with a size. "It's entirely baseless and is contributing to toxic societal norms that we are actively rewriting and rescripting," Bigi explains. "At Laws of Motion, your size is your name, because it doesn't matter what shape or size you are — what matters is that each product feels like it was made to fit you perfectly, because it was."

图片来源:Courtesy of Laws of Motion

“我们想象一个世界,女性的形状,他ights and weights have equal access to perfect-fitting apparel."

Bigi stresses that the apparel industry is "completely misaligned with consumer values." Today's conscientious consumers seek personalization, inclusivity andsustainability— all things that precision data makes possible. What's more, other industries, including beauty and healthcare, have already evolved to fulfill those wants, Bigi points out, while the apparel industry lags decades behind. Laws of Motion is ready to be the solution.

“我们想象一个世界,女性的形状,他ights and weights have equal access to perfect-fitting apparel that is specifically made for them using zero waste," Bigi says. "And we won't stop until that's the norm across the entire industry."

As the sun sets and excited attendees make their way below deck to try the tech out for themselves, it looks like the brand is well on its way to doing just that.

Amanda Breen

Entrepreneur Staff

Features Writer

Amanda Breen is a features writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate of Barnard College and received an MFA in writing at Columbia University, where she was a news fellow for the School of the Arts.

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