Category

Size chart — kids on Khaite

Recorded example of the size chart — kids pattern on Khaite (category page). RecoverBase describes what this brand chose to publish and cites outside research. This is observation, not a promise of results for your store.

Vertical
Luxury fashion
Stage
Category
Platform
Shopify
Verified
2026-05-18
Confidence
0%
Region
US store

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Implement 'Size chart — kids' when it directly answers a shopper question or reduces uncertainty on category pages, visible at the decision moment. Otherwise, it adds visual noise, duplicates information, or hurts performance.

What it is

Implement 'Size chart — kids' when it addresses a specific shopper uncertainty on the category page and is visible at the decision moment; otherwise, it adds visual noise.

  • Implement 'Size chart — kids' when it directly answers a shopper question or reduces uncertainty on category pages, visible at the decision moment. Otherwise, it adds visual noise, duplicates information, or hurts performance.

What research says

On category pages, where shoppers scan and narrow options, 'Size chart — kids' tends to be effective when it reduces real shopper uncertainty, rather than adding visual noise.

  • On category pages, where shoppers scan and narrow options, 'Size chart — kids' tends to be effective when it reduces real shopper uncertainty, rather than adding visual noise.Inferred
  • Shoppers tend to process 'Size chart — kids' rapidly, favoring clarity and a single obvious purpose over dense or decorative designs.Inferred
  • The utility of 'Size chart — kids' may be context-dependent; evidence suggests it must answer a specific shopper question on the category page, rather than being applied as a universal best practice.Inferred
  • Zero of seven sampled real stores currently implement 'Size chart — kids'.

Trade-offs

If 'Size chart — kids' does not reduce a real shopper uncertainty on the category page, it adds visual noise and clutter, increasing scan cost and making it harder for shoppers to narrow options.

  • If 'Size chart — kids' does not reduce a real shopper uncertainty on the category page, it adds visual noise and clutter, increasing scan cost and making it harder for shoppers to narrow options.
  • Skip 'Size chart — kids' if it duplicates information already obvious on the page, adding no new value.
  • Skip the element if page performance is already constrained, as it adds weight.

Other ways to do it

When 'Size chart — kids' does not reduce a real shopper uncertainty or duplicates existing information, omit the element to prevent visual noise and reduce scan cost.

  • When 'Size chart — kids' does not reduce a real shopper uncertainty or duplicates existing information, omit the element to prevent visual noise and reduce scan cost.
  • If page performance is a concern, prioritize core content over adding 'Size chart — kids' to avoid further constraints.
  • Ensure any sizing information is placed at the decision moment, not buried without scrolling or in the footer, if it is deemed necessary.

Screenshot

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Structured observations