How it works

Ten seconds.
One answer.
Every morning.

No learning curve. No app. No help from another person. ColorSense fits into the part of your morning that should just work.

The process

Four steps.
Done before your coffee is ready.

ColorSense strips every unnecessary step out of the process of knowing what color you’re holding.

📌
01

Place

Set ColorSense flat against the fabric — shirt, sock, scarf, anything. The weighted base holds it steady. The sensor window needs contact with the material, nothing else.

02

Press

One button. Press it once. No mode switching, no settings, no hold-to-activate. The button is large, tactile, and impossible to miss by feel.

🔈
03

Hear

ColorSense speaks the answer in plain language: “This is a dark navy blue.” No codes, no percentages. Just a word you can act on immediately.

🚪
04

Done

Walk out the door. The whole thing takes under ten seconds. ColorSense sits back on its weighted base, ready for tomorrow. Nothing to turn off.

What’s happening inside

Four phases.
Under a second each.

When you press the button, here’s what ColorSense does before it speaks.

Phase 01 — Illuminate
The LED array fires
A broadband LED illuminates the fabric at 4000K — consistent, repeatable, unaffected by ambient light. This is why ColorSense works in total darkness. Your room’s lighting is completely irrelevant to the measurement.
Phase 02 — Measure
18 channels of light data
The AS7341 spectral sensor captures light reflected from the fabric across 18 wavelength channels, 415nm to 940nm. The same physics as lab-grade colorimetry — miniaturized for fabric. A camera guesses. The sensor measures.
Phase 03 — Identify
AI matches to a color name
The spectral data is compared against ColorSense’s trained model, which maps spectral signatures to human color names. The model was trained specifically on fabric — not paint or plastic — because fabrics reflect light differently.
Phase 04 — Speak
The answer, out loud
The color name is spoken clearly through the built-in speaker. “This is” + color. Short. Unambiguous. No question marks. Volume is adjustable; the response format is not — by design.
Voice output

What you actually hear.

A few examples of how ColorSense describes what it finds.

When you scan a navy shirt
“This is a dark navy blue.”
Distinguishes navy from black — the most common confusion point
When you scan a charcoal sweater
“This is charcoal grey.”
Dark greys get their own name, not lumped into “black”
When you scan a burgundy tie
“This is a deep burgundy red.”
Rich colors described with a qualifier for precision
When you scan an olive jacket
“This is olive green.”
Olive vs. brown — frequently confused under poor lighting
Independence built in

Everything you need.
Nothing you don’t.

We removed every dependency we could.

📱
No phone
No companion app to install, update, or navigate. A phone can optionally extend features — but it is never required for the core function.
📶
No Wi-Fi
Color identification runs entirely on-device. A Wi-Fi outage doesn’t break your morning routine. Cloud features enhance; they never gate.
💡
No special lighting
The built-in LED provides its own illumination. Scan in a dark closet at 4am or under fluorescent lights. The result is the same.
🧠
No learning curve
Place. Press. Hear. A caregiver can explain it in under a minute. A first-time user gets it on the first try.
Reserve yours

ColorSense.
$149.

Early reservations get first units, locked pricing, and a free 3-month Care Plan.

Reserve ColorSense — $149