Launching today, a new site called What To Wear is looking to solve all your fashion dilemmas. The project is the latest from the fashion conglomerate Like.com, the team behind the recently premiered AskAStylist iPhone application, which allows users to procure up-to-the-minute stylist feedback. (The latter, since debuting, has been downloaded 100,000 times and is currently receiving an average of over 7,000 questions a week, over half of which are from repeat users.) While What To Wear incorporates much of AskAStylist's approach, it delivers a whole new world of sartorial advice courtesy of trained stylists and one's peers. With a slew—over a dozen to be exact—of "featured stylists," most them Hollywood as opposed to editorial stylists (like Nicole Chavez, pictured here), offering advice on a regular basis, there's no shortage of trained experts lending their two cents. And, in addition to seasoned stylists, there are aspiring ones, too, including spotlighted bloggers from around the world.

Featured bloggers and readers alike can rise in the ranks, earning the spotlight on the site the more they use it (users garner points each time they offer advice). "It's great for aspiring fashion bloggers as it provides a platform to allow new people to rise in the ranks," I was told during a site demo yesterday. And, while this sounds like spokesperson speak, the site is so easy to use that I have no doubt it'll become a time warp for plenty of clotheshorses.

Simply pose a question and watch as responses trickle in. Or, respond to a question with outfit suggestions; as you type words like 'romper' or 'green silk taffeta gown,' images of according styles will pop up (courtesy of Like.com's sister sites, recently launched Couturious and Weardrobe) so that you can post a picture of what you recommend someone wear along with comments. Like an outfit? With a click you can be transported to a retailer that sells whatever item has piqued your fancy. To boot, the international aspect of the site (over half AskAStylist's users are from outside the U.S.) is surely one of its most interesting: pages upon pages of readers seeking advice for what to wear to a 'spring wedding' or 'prom 2010' can in fact be translated into 10 different languages.