What is the Outfits folder?
In Second Life, the Outfits folder (located in your Inventory) stores links to items like clothing, shape, skin, and attachments for quick avatar changes. You can create, rename, and organize outfits by dragging items into new, custom-named folders. Recent viewer updates often prevent nested subfolders directly within the main "Outfits" folder, requiring users to manage nested, organized folder structures within their general inventory instead.
What is this article about?
The Outfits folder can quickly become quite large with many outfits, each of which include links to the same items like body, head, shape, skin, and some attachments always worn. This article describes an alternate way to organize outfits so they are easy to find, manage, and wear.
What is this alternate method of organizing outfit folders?
To organize outfit folders outside the system Outfits folder, create and populate folders in your general inventory:
1. Create a top-level folder in your Inventory. Let's call it "** Outfits **"
2. Create a subfolder in the "** Outfits **" folder. Let's call it "Base".
3. Create links in the "Base" folder for all items your outfits will share. For example, my Base folder contains linke to the body, shape, eyes, head, skin, eyebrows, body morphs, physics, kisser, spanker, AO, and BOMs I use in all my outfits.
3b. One way to easily populate the Base folder with your shared outfit items is to copy all the items from an existing system Outfits folder, paste them into the Base folder, and delete the outfit specific items like clothing and attachments not shared across all outfits.
4. Create a subfolder in the "** Outfits **" folder with the name of some outfit. Let's say it is named "Red Bikini".
5. Create links in the "Red Bikini" folder for all the items in that outfit that are not already in the Base folder. For example, create links for the bikini top, the bikini bottom, the hair you wish to wear with this outfit, shoes if worn, sunglasses, vagina and vagina HUD if worn with the bikini, jewelry, fingernails, tattoos, etc
6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 for each outfit you wish to manage in your "** Outfits **" folder
7. Wearing an outfit in the "** Outfits **" folder is a two step process:
1. Right click the "Base" folder and select "Replace Current Outfit"
2. Right click the outfit folder you wish to wear and select "Add To Current Outfit"
8. To change outfits managed in the "** Outfits **" folder either repeat step 7 above for a different outfit or:
1. Right click the outfit folder you are wearing and select "Remove From Current Outfit"
2. Right click the outfit folder you wish to wear and select "Add To Current Outfit"
9. To update all of the outfits in your "** Outfits **" folder with a new base head, body, shape, skin, or any shared item in the Base folder, simply replace that link with a link to the new item
If, as you add outfits in this manner, you discover that an item in the Base folder does not belong in one or more of your outfits then you will need to copy and paste that item into all outfits where it belongs and delete that item from the Base folder. The Base folder can only contain items that are shared by all outfits managed in this way.
You can create multiple Base folders, each for a different type of body, shape, skin, or look. For example, I have a Base folder for my regular sized avatar and another Base folder for my petite sized avatar. You can have a base folder for your Neko and another for your Goth. Or use a single smaller Base folder for all.
Why would I want to do this?
Maybe you don't want to do this. The system Outfits folder is the easiest way to manage outfits. When you create a new outfit with the Appearance icon it automatically populates a folder in the system Outfits folder with all items worn or attached for that outfit. However, many many system Outfits folders can induce lag and slow you down. In addition, it becomes difficult to locate outfits as you have to scroll through so many. And the duplication of so many items in every outfit folder in the system Outfits folder grows your inventory uneccesarily. It is also tedious to add or remove an item from all system Outfits.
Using a general Inventory folder to manage outfits allows you to create subfolders to further organize and make things easy to find. For example, I put all my bikini outfits in a subfolder named "Bikinis" under my "** Outfits **" folder.
It becomes easier to update all outfits with a simple change to the Base folder. If you want to add an item to all outfits in the system Outfits folder then you have to copy a link to that item into each outfit folder, potentially very tedious.
What should I do?
In my case, I decided to use both the system Outfits folder and a couple of Base folders with outfits for each. The outfits I wear most often I manage in the system Outfits folder but I try to keep that folder small enough to locate outfits easily. I moved all my other outfits to either my petite Base or my regular Base. In the Base outfits folders I created subfolders to organize further, placing all my bikini outfits in a subfolder, all my cyber outfits in a Cyber subfolder, all my skate outfits in a Skater subfolder, and so on.
I would say this method of using a Base folder with small outfit folders is not a replacement for the system Outfits folder but can be convenient when used in conjunction with the system Outfits folder. It offers some benefits such as easy update to all outfit folders, organization in subfolders, and reduction of inventory duplication. The main drawback of the Base folder method is it requires two steps to wear an outfit - Replace and Add, whereas the system Outfit folders only require one step - Replace.
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