Why Buying Clothes Online Still Feels Like Guesswork
Online fashion shopping has made clothing more accessible than ever, but it still struggles to recreate the confidence of shopping in a physical store. Customers often cannot judge how a garment will fit, look, or match the clothes they already own. That uncertainty leads to hesitation, abandoned carts, disappointing purchases, and high return rates that brands must absorb. While fashion retailers continue investing in digital experiences, helping shoppers feel confident before they buy remains one of the industry's biggest challenges. This search for confidence eventually found an answer through Trylle, but that solution began with founder Dhruti Nukala's own shopping experiences, making her story the natural place to continue.
How Personal Shopping Experiences Shaped Dhruti Nukala's Vision
Growing up in Bangalore, Dhruti Nukala regularly shopped for clothes online and experienced the same frustration many customers quietly accept. Incorrect sizing and garments looking different on her body made every purchase feel uncertain. Instead of treating these disappointments as a normal part of online shopping, she became curious about why the experience remained so unreliable. At just 19 years old, she began exploring the deeper challenges behind fashion e-commerce and discovered that shoppers were not the only ones paying the price. Fashion brands were also carrying the financial burden of returns, encouraging her to look beyond individual purchases toward a broader industry problem.
That understanding gradually shaped Trylle into a platform focused on helping fashion brands recreate the confidence of shopping in-store. Instead of offering a single feature, the company combines virtual try-ons, personalized styling recommendations, sizing assistance, and customer insights into one integration. The objective is not only to help customers visualize products but also to make online shopping feel intentional rather than endless scrolling. By helping shoppers better understand what suits them before purchasing, Trylle also enables brands to reduce returns, improve conversions, and gain deeper insight into customer preferences, creating a more informed shopping journey.
The Challenge of Building Something Different
Like many founders building something new, there were moments when the path forward felt uncertain. Creating new technology meant solving problems that had not been solved before, requiring constant experimentation, persistence, and belief in the vision.
What kept Dhruti moving forward was not just the technology but the people affected by the problem. Millions of shoppers still purchase clothing online without confidence, while fashion brands continue absorbing the cost of unnecessary returns. Every conversation with customers and every discussion with brands reinforced the same reality: the industry needed a better shopping experience.
That conviction became the driving force behind Trylle—to make online fashion shopping feel as confident, personal, and intuitive as trying clothes on in-store.
The earliest validation came from testing Trylle with online shoppers before they completed their purchases. The experience noticeably changed how people approached buying clothes online, making them feel more confident in their decisions. Dhruti also observed that shopping, especially for many women, extends beyond choosing a single garment. Customers think about outfits they already own, how new pieces work together, and the occasions they are buying for. These insights reinforced the importance of personalization and showed that shopping confidence involves understanding individual preferences rather than simply displaying products on a screen.
Building the Future of Personalized Fashion Commerce
Looking ahead, Trylle aims to make online shopping as personal and confident as visiting a physical store. Dhruti believes fashion commerce will gradually move away from endless browsing toward intelligent experiences where every shopper can discover products that genuinely fit their style and needs. The company also wants fashion brands to express their identity more naturally through their websites, allowing collections to feel interactive rather than static. In the long term, Trylle hopes to become the personalization infrastructure powering the next generation of fashion retail, supporting both brands and customers through more meaningful digital experiences.
Throughout the journey, Dhruti has remained focused on solving a problem that she personally experienced instead of chasing trends. Her parents became the first people to believe in the idea, providing encouragement during the earliest stages when confidence mattered most. That support, combined with customer feedback, strengthened her commitment to building something meaningful for fashion commerce. Today, her ambition extends beyond improving online shopping; she wants to change the emotions associated with buying fashion online by making every interaction feel more intentional. Her advice to future founders remains simple:
Make the impossible, possible.