Build a "complete the look" outfit bundle for [your products — e.g., the Dawn Dress + Dawn Boot + Slip + Belt]. [X%] off the full outfit, single-tap add to cart.
Want more control? See the expanded prompt ›
Build an outfit bundle for the Dawn Dress + Dawn Boot + Slip + Belt. Show as a 'complete the look' section on each item's PDP. Single tap adds the full outfit to cart with a 10% bundle discount.
- Curator-led outfit bundle (not algorithmic).
- Bundle discount applied automatically.
- Single-tap adds entire outfit to cart.
- Different from mix-and-match — opinionated, not customizable.
Sections this page should include
- 'Complete the look' section on each PDP
- Curated outfit (dress + boot + slip + belt)
- Single-tap add-to-cart for full outfit
- Bundle discount applied automatically
- Trust signals + reviews from outfit shoppers
What you're trying to do
Mix-and-match bundles let shoppers build their own; outfit bundles do the work for them. Different psychology, different conversion. Outfit bundles work especially well for fashion — show the dress with the boots, belt, and slip that complete the look, and shoppers who came for the dress leave with all four.
Things to watch out for
- Curation — Fudge handles this: opinionated, not algorithmic. The styling is the value.
- Discount math — Fudge handles this: slightly less than what they'd save shopping each piece separately.
- Inventory — Fudge respects stock; hides bundles when any item is out.
- Variant matching — Fudge handles this: sizes pair sensibly across items.
How Fudge does it
Fudge duplicates your live theme into a draft, builds a custom page template with the sections and logic your prompt requires, and populates it with your real products, pricing, and brand styling. Everything starts in draft — you preview before publishing, tweak any section, and your live store stays untouched until you're ready.
Building outfit bundle (“complete the look”) on every PDP
An outfit bundle is the brand-curated version of bundle building. Where a bundle-builder page lets shoppers pick freely, an outfit bundle says “the dress goes with this boot, this slip, this belt — buy the whole look for 10% off.” Different psychology, different conversion mode, complementary play.
When this page is worth building
Build outfit bundles if you sell fashion, jewelry, home decor, or any category where complete-look styling matters. Skip the framing for utility products where there’s no clear “look” to complete.
The placement matters more than the mechanic. Outfit bundles work on the PDP, in the cart drawer, in the post-purchase flow — anywhere shoppers are already committed to a single SKU and might add the complementary pieces.
What makes one great
- ‘Complete the look’ section on each PDP — placed below the buy box, visible without scrolling far.
- Curated outfit — 3–4 complementary SKUs that genuinely look good together (not algorithmically paired).
- Single-tap add-to-cart for full outfit — friction-free for the shoppers who want the curation.
- Bundle discount applied automatically — 10% off when buying the whole outfit triggers the trade-up.
- Individual product links too — shoppers who want to swap one piece can do so.
Common mistakes to avoid
The biggest mistake is algorithmic outfit pairing. “Customers also viewed” recommendations don’t curate; an actual stylist (or Fudge with stylist-level brand context) does.
The second mistake is over-discounting the outfit. 10% is the sweet spot for fashion; deeper discounts can train shoppers to wait for the outfit deal instead of buying individually.
Pair this with frequently bought together and bundle builder page — three complementary AOV mechanics across different surfaces.