20 best domain names for an Curvy Fit Intelligence.
Curvy Fit Intelligence is a fit-prediction platform built specifically for plus-size online shoppers (sizes 14 to 28), translating detailed body-shape inputs into brand-specific size recommendations across retailers like ASOS Curve, Torrid, and Universal Standard. A browser extension and app capture purchase-and-return outcomes to grow a proprietary curvy fit-graph that gets sharper with every order.
Reading the room.
Look at the established names in fit-prediction and a pattern jumps out almost immediately: everyone is doing the same two-word construction. True Fit. Fit Analytics. Fit Finder. Fit Predictor. Bold Metrics. The category has basically converged on 'Fit' plus a utilitarian noun, and you can see why. It signals the product category in the first syllable, it survives B2B procurement decks, and it sounds like infrastructure. But it also makes every brand sound like the same brand. I had to keep double-checking which company I was reading about.
The second wave, the ones that came in around 2018 to 2022, started reaching for cuteness to escape the sea of sameness. Sizekick, Easysize, EyeFitU, Virtusize, Perfitt. These are puns, portmanteaus, and friendly compound words. They feel more consumer, less enterprise, but most of them still treat the shopper as a generic body. None of them say anything about who the body belongs to. That is the gap. Search 'plus size fit app' and you will find a lot of generic sizing tools claiming to work for everyone, plus a handful of retailer-owned quizzes (Universal Standard's 'Fit Liberty', Torrid's in-house size guide), and not much built from the ground up for curvy bodies. The closest spiritual cousins are community brands like Dia & Co and content properties like The Curvy Fashionista, which lean hard on the word 'curvy' itself as identity.
So the room is loud about fit and quiet about who is doing the fitting. A name aimed at sizes 14 to 28 has room to do something the incumbents structurally cannot: name the body, not just the measurement. 'Curvy', 'shape', 'pear', 'hourglass', 'contour' all carry meaning here that 'fit' alone cannot. The risk is going too cute or too body-coded and losing the data-credibility signal that retailers want when they integrate you. The sweet spot is a name that sounds warm to the shopper opening the extension and serious to the merchandising director cutting the affiliate check. Most of the .ai domains on the shortlist (curveo, curvella, shapegraph, truecurve) are reaching for exactly that combination, with varying degrees of success.
Six rules for naming a Fashion & Apparel product.
Not general naming advice — these are patterns that work specifically for this niche. Apply them to the shortlist below.
Name the body, not the tape measure
Incumbents own 'fit' and 'size' to the point of indistinguishability. Lean on words your user already uses for herself: curve, shape, contour, pear, hourglass. That is where the affinity is, and that is where the competitors are not.
Avoid the Fit-plus-noun trap
True Fit, Fit Finder, Fit Predictor, Fit Analytics. If your name slots cleanly into that lineup, retailers will mentally file you as the fifth one. Make the structural shape of your name different so the positioning is different.
Signal data without sounding like a B2B vendor
Your shopper is a consumer, not a procurement officer. Words like 'graph', 'intelligence', or 'atlas' hint at the underlying model, but pair them with something human (curve, shape) so the extension does not feel like SAP for jeans.
Be careful with body-shape metaphors
Pear, hourglass, apple, and bombshell are vivid but loaded. Some of your users actively reject those categories. If you use one, make sure it reads as celebratory and not as the diet-industry vocabulary it came from.
Two syllables beats three for an extension
This product lives in a browser toolbar and a phone home screen. Curvora, Shapebop, Fyttr, Sizia all land faster than four-syllable constructions. The icon will be a tiny circle. The word has to fit next to it.
Pick a TLD your shopper will actually retype
.ai reads credible to investors and reads like a typo to a 38-year-old in Toledo searching for her ASOS Curve size. If the consumer brand is the wedge, a .com like fitvouch or shapebop will out-convert a clever .ai every time, even if the .ai sounds smarter in the pitch.
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Playful, energetic .com that centers shape over sizing jargon, landing perfectly in a browser toolbar for curvy shoppers.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 02
Vouching for fit accuracy is the entire promise of this platform, and the .com makes it instantly trustworthy to a skeptical shopper.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 03
Evokes a map or graph of your specific curves, signaling data intelligence without sounding like enterprise software.
best: namecheap $9.99godaddy $10.69vercel $11.25netim $19 - 04
Smooth coined word that sounds feminine and tech-forward, fitting comfortably on a phone home screen icon.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 05
Soft, elegant invented name centered on curves rather than fit or size, avoiding the crowded Fit-plus-noun trap entirely.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 06
Promises accuracy around the body language your user already uses for herself, not the tape measure.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 07
Contour is the visual vocabulary of body shape without the loaded diet-industry baggage of pear or hourglass.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 08
Action-verb construction signals transformation and personalization, putting the curvy shopper's body at the center of the experience.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 09
Attitude meets curve in a name that reads as celebratory and confident rather than clinical or corrective.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 10
Directly addresses the shopper's core frustration that standard size charts are not real for her body shape.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 11
Hints at the proprietary fit-graph engine underneath while staying readable to a consumer rather than a B2B buyer.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 12
Ultra-short coined name that fits easily beside a tiny toolbar icon and sounds modern without alienating a mainstream shopper.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 13
Clear action-oriented name that puts the curvy identity first and signals a shopping utility immediately.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 14
Speaks directly to the shopper's unmet need in plain language, though the three-word structure is slightly long for a toolbar.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 15
Combines the human word shape with data vocabulary graph to hint at the fit-intelligence engine without sounding like SAP.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 16
Fashion-forward pairing that signals style credibility for plus-size shoppers, though chic skews aspirational rather than functional.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 17
Nest implies a personalized home for your fit profile, though the warmth metaphor underplays the data-intelligence angle.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 18
Atlas signals a comprehensive map of fit outcomes across brands, though the Fit-prefix risks blending into TrueFit territory.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 19
Alignment is a credible fit metaphor but the Fit-suffix pulls the name back into the crowded incumbent lineup.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212 - 20
Glam adds fashion energy but the Fit-suffix and generic pairing make it hard to differentiate from existing retailer tools.
best: namecheap $139.98vercel $160netim $210godaddy $212
Frequently asked.
Every day, ChatDomain generates hundreds of candidate names for each new idea, checks availability across dozens of TLDs, and ranks the top 20 on brandability, pronunciation, and pricing. The text on this page is AI-assisted research, reviewed before publication.