Kut from the Kloth
01

Audit Overview

Your store's untapped revenue potential — and how to unlock it

Why We Created This Audit

We analyzed https://kutfromthekloth.com the same way we've audited 350+ e-commerce stores — looking for the specific gaps between your current experience and what top-performing Fashion & Apparel stores deliver. Every finding in this report is a revenue opportunity backed by industry data and competitive benchmarks.

3 Critical
4 Important
3 Opportunities

What We Analyzed

  • UX & Conversion Design10 findings
  • Performance & Speedvs 3 competitors
  • Technology & App StackPlatform + 18 apps
  • Industry BenchmarksFashion & Apparel

Pages Analyzed

  • Homepage2 findings
  • Collection Pages1 findings
  • Product Pages (PDP)5 findings
  • Cart & Checkout2 findings
Growisto This audit was prepared by Growisto — a CRO-led Website development team behind 167% conversion growth for Atomberg, 46% CR lift for TyresNmore, and 350+ e-commerce projects.
02

Performance & Technology

Speed benchmarks, Core Web Vitals, and technology assessment for Kut from the Kloth

81

Mobile PageSpeed Score

Strong performance position — Kut from the Kloth leads its peer set on mobile and is excellent on desktop; the main opportunity is trimming mobile LCP/FCP into the green.

Competitive Comparison

Benchmarked against 3 leading Fashion & Apparel stores in your market

Store Mobile Score Desktop Score Mobile LCP Mobile CLS Mobile TBT
Kut from the Kloth (Client)81963.8s00ms
Good American44565.3s0.0291,048ms
DL196130569.0s0.0362,351ms
Everlane274223.2s02,435ms
Good
Needs Improvement
Poor

⚠ Note: Good American, DL1961, Everlane score lower than Kut from the Kloth on mobile PageSpeed. This reflects the Fashion & Apparel category average — even established brands in this space struggle with mobile performance. The opportunity is to leapfrog the category, not just match it.

A 1-second delay in mobile load time can reduce conversions by up to 7%. For every 100ms improvement in LCP, conversion rates increase by ~0.4%. Source: Google/Deloitte, 2024

Core Web Vitals — Google's UX Quality Signals

Sites failing Core Web Vitals may rank lower in Google mobile search results

⚠ 2 of 5 Core Web Vitals passed
LCP How fast content appears
3.8s
Target: ≤ 2.5s
Fail
FCP First visual response
3.5s
Target: ≤ 1.8s
Fail
TBT Main thread blocking
0ms
Target: ≤ 200ms
Pass
CLS Visual stability
0
Target: ≤ 0.1
Pass
INP Tap/click responsiveness
N/A
Target: ≤ 200ms
N/A

What This Means for Revenue

Kut from the Kloth posts a stable mobile Lighthouse score of 81 and an excellent 96 on desktop. Against the benchmarked peers it leads on mobile by a wide margin — Good American 44, DL1961 30, Everlane 27 — reflecting a Fashion & Apparel category that broadly struggles with mobile speed. TBT and CLS are already clean; the remaining opportunity is mobile LCP (3.8s) and FCP (3.5s), both just above Core Web Vitals thresholds. Net: mobile performance is a competitive strength to protect, with a clear path to leapfrog fully into the green by optimizing hero-image delivery and render-blocking resources.

Technology Stack

✓ All 5 core technology areas (platform, theme, checkout, payments, security) are well-configured on a native Shopify stack
Modern Platform

Platform

Shopify

Shopify-hosted storefront on the Sleek theme (Shopify Theme Store, schema v2.2.0). Auto-scaling, PCI-compliant checkout, and 99.99% platform uptime out of the box.

Licensed Theme (Sleek)

Theme

Sleek

  • Type: Shopify Theme Store theme, lightly customized
  • Schema v2.2.0, OS 2.0 compatible
  • Kiwi Sizing size-chart modal renders full bottoms/tops/plus measurement tables directly in-theme
Native

Checkout & Payments

Native Shopify Checkout via Shopify Payments

  • Guest checkout: Enabled via native Shopify checkout
  • Express checkout: Shop Pay, PayPal, and Google Pay all present in the cart, plus Shop Pay Installments (pay-in-4) on the PDP
  • Shop Pay, PayPal, Google Pay, Shop Pay Installments (4 interest-free payments)

Technology Assessment

Kut from the Kloth runs on Shopify with the licensed "Sleek" theme and a fully native checkout — no overlay checkout app, no non-standard payment routing. Shop Pay, PayPal, Google Pay, and Shop Pay Installments all render correctly in the cart. A single minor console error (an undefined-variable reference in a third-party script) was observed but did not affect any core purchase flow during this audit.

03

UX & Conversion Findings

Page-by-page analysis with visual comparisons against top Fashion & Apparel stores

Add one-tap quick shop to homepage tiles so shoppers browsing $119-$124 styles don't lose momentum to a full PDP load
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth HOMEPAGE
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth HOMEPAGE
Observations
  • Homepage "So, what else is new?" tiles show only a product image, wishlist icon, title and price — there is no add-to-cart or quick-shop action on the tile itself.
  • Tapping anywhere on the tile routes to the full PDP, adding a page load before a shopper can act on impulse.
  • Every featured homepage tile links to a product priced $119-$124, exactly the range where cutting friction to cart matters most.
Recommendations
  • Add a "Quick Add" icon/button on each homepage product tile that opens a lightweight size-select sheet without leaving the page.
  • Keep the existing wishlist heart in place and add quick-add as a secondary affordance so the two don't compete visually.
Growing -- seen on several contemporary fashion DTC storefronts
Turn the 4 social icons parked in the footer into a shoppable Instagram-style gallery so real customer styling photos surface before a shopper ever leaves the homepage
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth HOMEPAGE
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth HOMEPAGE
Observations
  • The homepage footer links out to Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and Pinterest, but none of the four feeds into an on-page gallery — tapping any icon sends the shopper away from kutfromthekloth.com entirely.
  • The "Worn. Loved. Reviewed." section pairs studio product photography with review quotes; it is not sourced from real customer photos and isn't presented as shoppable UGC.
  • Right after that reviews carousel, the homepage moves straight into the app-download QR block and footer — there is no dedicated shoppable social gallery anywhere on the page.
Recommendations
  • Add a shoppable Instagram-style gallery module above the footer that pulls real customer photos tagged with the brand hashtag and links each photo to its product page.
  • Keep the existing studio-photo review carousel as-is for reviews, and let the new gallery carry the discovery-stage social-proof job instead of asking the footer icons to do it.
Differentiator -- adopted by a minority of fashion DTC homepages
Add a one-tap quick-add action to shop-all product tiles so shoppers aren't routed to a full PDP just to choose a size
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth COLLECTION
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth COLLECTION
Observations
  • Product tiles on /collections/shop-all show only an image, a wishlist heart icon, title and price — there is no add-to-cart or quick-add button visible on the tile itself.
  • The theme does include a "Choose options" quick-add action on each card, but it is suppressed on mobile widths, so it never appears for a shopper browsing on a phone.
  • Tapping a tile routes straight to the full product page, adding a page load before a shopper can select a size and add to cart.
Recommendations
  • Enable the theme's existing "Choose options" quick-add affordance on mobile widths instead of hiding it, so tapping a tile opens a lightweight size-select sheet without leaving the grid.
  • Keep the wishlist heart in its current position and let quick-add sit alongside it as a secondary action on the tile.
Standard -- a common pattern on fashion DTC collection grids
Add a Buy Now button beside Add to Cart to shorten checkout on a $119 pair of jeans for decided shoppers
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Observations
  • The PDP action area shows a single "ADD TO CART" button once a size is selected; there is no secondary "Buy Now" / "Buy It Now" button anywhere on the page.
  • Shoppers who already know their size and wash still have to open the cart before reaching the checkout button.
  • Express payment logos (Shop Pay, PayPal, Google Pay) only appear once a shopper reaches the cart, not on the PDP itself.
Recommendations
  • Add a "Buy Now" button next to Add to Cart that routes a decided shopper straight to checkout, skipping the cart step.
  • Surface the same Shop Pay / PayPal / Google Pay express options directly in the PDP action area for repeat shoppers.
Differentiator -- present on some fashion DTC PDPs
Replace the zip-only expedited-shipping notice with a real delivery date estimate on every $99+ PDP
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Observations
  • The PDP shows "No expedited shipping options to your location" tied to a zip-code lookup, but this only states what ISN'T available — it never tells the shopper when standard shipping will actually arrive.
  • There is no "Usually ships in X days" or "Arrives by [date]" messaging anywhere on the product page.
  • The zip-based module is the only delivery signal on the page, so a shopper outside the expedited zone gets a negative-framed message with no positive delivery promise to balance it.
Recommendations
  • Add a static or dynamic delivery-date estimate ("Ships within 1-2 business days", "Arrives by [date]") next to the existing shipping module.
  • Keep the zip-code expedited-shipping check, but pair it with the baseline delivery promise so the message reads as reassurance rather than a limitation.
Growing -- common on fashion PDPs with defined fulfillment windows
Grey out the 1 sold-out size pill on each style so shoppers stop tapping a size that dead-ends at checkout
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Everlane — Mobile
Everlane — Mobile
Observations
  • On the Bellamy Linen Jacket, the X LARGE size pill renders with the exact same plain outline style as the four in-stock sizes — no strikethrough, greying, or "Sold Out" label is visible.
  • The only signal that X LARGE is unavailable lives in a screen-reader-only label ("Variant sold out or unavailable") that produces no visible styling difference for sighted shoppers.
  • A shopper choosing a size by sight alone has no way to know it's unavailable until after tapping it and hitting a dead end.
Recommendations
  • Apply a visible treatment (greyed background, strikethrough, or a small "Sold Out" tag) to out-of-stock size pills across the theme.
  • Pair the visual treatment with a "Notify Me" back-in-stock capture so an unavailable size still converts to an email signup instead of a dead end.
Standard -- a widely adopted size-availability pattern in fashion
Rebuild the 4-card "You may also like" rail into a complete-the-look feature so PDP cross-sell suggests tops and shoes, not 4 more washes of the same jean
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Good American — Mobile
Good American — Mobile
Observations
  • The "You may also like" rail on the Kelsey Ankle Flare PDP surfaces more Kelsey Ankle Flare product cards — same silhouette, same rise, different washes — rather than complementary pieces.
  • Each recommended card lets a shopper pick a size and add straight from the rail, but every option leads back to the identical jean style already being viewed.
  • No top, shoe, or accessory is suggested anywhere in the rail, so the module functions as a wash-switcher rather than an outfit-building or basket-building tool.
Recommendations
  • Configure the related-products rail to pull from complementary categories (tops, shoes, outerwear) instead of same-style variants, so it builds a full outfit around the viewed jean.
  • If wash-switching still has value, keep it as a smaller "More washes of this style" row lower on the page — don't let it be the entire cross-sell section.
Growing -- adopted by fashion DTC PDPs that build cross-category outfit rails
Add size pills and an Add-to-Cart button inside the size-chart modal so shoppers can convert straight from the fit reference
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth PDP
Observations
  • Opening the Size Charts modal on the Kelsey High Rise Ankle Flare PDP shows only measurement tables (Women's Bottoms, Top's, Plus Size) with no size selector and no Add to Cart control anywhere in the modal.
  • A shopper who opens the modal to check their measurements has to close it and scroll back to the PDP's own size selector to pick a size and add to cart.
  • The modal is a dead end for conversion — it only informs, it never lets the shopper act on what they just read.
Recommendations
  • Add size pills inside the size-chart modal, pre-populated from the same variant data as the PDP selector, so a shopper can pick a size right where they're comparing measurements.
  • Add an Add to Cart button beneath the size pills in the modal so choosing a size and converting happens without closing the modal first.
Growing -- adopted by fashion DTC PDPs that combine sizing help with conversion
Add a Continue Shopping link to the full cart page so shoppers with 2 items aren't stuck using the back button
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth CART
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth CART
Observations
  • The dedicated /cart page shows line items, express checkout (Shop, PayPal, Google Pay) and a "You may also like" rail, but no "Continue Shopping" link or button anywhere on the page.
  • The cart drawer can be dismissed to resume browsing, but a shopper who lands on the standalone /cart URL directly has no equivalent on-page path back to the store.
Recommendations
  • Add a clearly labeled "Continue Shopping" link near the top of the full cart page that returns to the last browsed collection or homepage.
  • Place the link above the cross-sell rail so shoppers see an easy way back before being pitched more products.
Standard -- a baseline pattern on most full-page carts
Surface the same $32+ savings line on the full cart page that already shows in the drawer before checkout
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Kut from the Kloth — Mobile
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth CART
Proposed Implementation — Kut from the Kloth CART
Observations
  • With a discounted item in cart, the cart drawer shows an explicit "Discount" line separate from the subtotal — but the full /cart page order summary shows only an "Estimated total" figure with no savings line at all.
  • A shopper who opens the standalone cart page rather than the drawer loses the visual reinforcement of how much they're saving right before checkout.
  • The same discounted line item also shows only its sale price on the full cart page, without the original price or "Save $X" callout the drawer displays for it.
Recommendations
  • Add the same aggregate "Discount" / "You saved" line to the full /cart page order summary that already exists in the cart drawer.
  • Restore the original-price-plus-savings callout on individual discounted line items on the full cart page to match the drawer's presentation.
Growing -- adopted by cart experiences with strong markdown merchandising
04

App Ecosystem

What's installed vs what's missing from best-in-class Fashion & Apparel stores

18 Apps
Detected
2 Critical Categories
Missing
Kut from the Kloth already runs a dense, mature app stack spanning email/SMS, reviews, sizing, returns, back-in-stock, post-purchase tracking, charitable giving, A/B testing, and shoppable video — well above what a typical fashion DTC store of this size runs. The two flagged gaps are secondary, and two of the existing tools (the AI shopping-assistant pair and the stacked popup pair) show functional overlap rather than a coverage gap.

Present (18)

Klaviyo
Email & SMS Marketing
Attentive
Email & SMS Marketing
Okendo
Reviews & Social Proof
396 reviews with photo/video content and a fit-rating breakdown on the sampled PDP
Kiwi Sizing
Size Guide / Fit Finder
Full bottoms/tops/plus measurement charts render correctly in-modal
Redo
Returns & Exchanges
Powers the "Instant Exchange, No extra fees" messaging near the ATC button
Gorgias
Customer Service / Live Chat
Narvar
Post-Purchase Tracking
Amp (Back in Stock)
Back-in-Stock Notifications
Octane AI
AI Shopping Assistant / Quiz
A second, separate AI assistant widget (Spiffy) also runs on the PDP — the two may overlap in purpose
Spiffy AI
AI Shopping Assistant
Duplicates Octane AI's "ask about fit" functionality on the same PDP
ShoppingGives
Charitable Giving / Cause Marketing
Intelligems
A/B Testing & Pricing Experiments
Videowise
Shoppable Video
Wheelio / Alia ("Scratch to Win")
Gamified Email Capture
The scratch-card popup re-triggered on repeated page navigations during this audit and a persistent tab remained pinned to the screen edge after dismissal
Bounce Exchange
On-Site Personalization / Survey Popup
A separate "Hi there" survey popup can stack on top of the Wheelio/Alia scratch-card popup, layering two overlays at once
Rakuten Advertising
Affiliate Program
Criteo
Retargeting
Shop Pay / PayPal / Google Pay
Express Checkout
All three render correctly in the cart drawer and full cart page

Missing (2)

Loyalty / Rewards Balance Widget Recommended
Customer Retention
🔄 Repeat purchase lift from visible points balance
Common on fashion DTC stores with a dedicated rewards page
Shoppable Instagram / UGC Gallery Nice-To-Have
Social Proof & Content
✨ Additional on-site social proof at the homepage browse stage
Adopted by several fashion DTC storefronts alongside footer social links

App Stack Assessment

The app ecosystem here is a strength, not a weakness — 18 purpose-built tools cover nearly every category a fashion brand needs. The main opportunity is consolidation (two overlapping AI assistants, two popups that can stack on top of each other) rather than filling true gaps.

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