Finding things to buy on Pinterest is about to get a lot easier

Pinterest wants to be synonymous with shopping and its building high-tech tools centered around the camera to help.
 By 
Samantha Murphy Kelly
 on 
Finding things to buy on Pinterest is about to get a lot easier
Pinterest Headquarters in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kim Kulish/Corbis via Getty Images) Credit: Corbis via Getty Images

Pinterest announced a collection of new tools on Tuesday that aim to make shopping on the site easier, including the addition of visual search tech that lets you shop online for products you discovered offline, with the help of your camera.

The company announced the new suite of tools, dubbed “Shopping with Pinterest,” at an event held at its company headquarters in San Francisco.

The biggest piece of news from the event is one that isn't quite live yet. In the months ahead, users will have the ability to take a photo of an object in the real world -- or say, a scene (like the decor of a cute cabin you stayed at over the weekend) -- and Pinterest will push out related recommendations based on the style. Mashable got a sneak preview of the feature (captured in the Vine below) and offline-to-online detection was smooth and took less than four seconds.


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The company also showed off a new automatic object detection feature on iOS that allows users to find products within a pin. For example, if you're looking at a pin of a woman wearing a bracelet, bag and pants, you can tap the visual search icon located at the top of the pin. This will put tiny dots on each item that can reveal more information about each product.

Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

"Since an image can contain dozens of objects, we wanted to make it as simple as possible to start a discovery experience from any of them," the company said on its engineering blog. "In the same way auto-complete improves the experience of text search, automatic object detection makes visual search a more seamless experience. Object detection in visual search also enables enable new features, like object-to-object matching."

The move is a part of a greater effort to turn the photo-rich site into an e-commerce platform and make it easier for users to find products they like.

“People are looking for ideas [on Pinterest]; they’re not looking for news or pictures of friends or family,” a company spokesperson told attendees, adding about 55% of Pinterest users consider it a place to shop.

Last year, the company added buyable pins to its mobile platform -- allowing users to make product purchases directly from the site -- but Pinterest announced the feature will now be available on the web version, as well. 

Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Pinterest is also adding a shopping bag that follows you from page to page (accessible both on mobile or a laptop) and better viewing tools that show products at different angles. Shoppers will also be able to find new products on new merchant profiles (seen above); these pages show what's new, what's popular and what's on sale.  

The company said it continues to work hard on building deeper learning algorithms, especially around the camera, to bridge the gap between offline and online shopping.

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Samantha Murphy Kelly

Samantha Murphy Kelly was the Deputy Tech Editor for Mashable, where she covered lifestyle tech and entertainment. She joined the Mashable team in 2011 and was based in New York.Samantha is regularly featured on national TV broadcasts -- including Fox, Fox Business, CNBC, the BBC and HuffPost Live -- contributes to radio segments (NPR, Wall Street Journal Radio) and has served as a panelist and moderator at conferences.Before joining Mashable, Samantha covered the tech industry as a senior writer for TechNewsDaily and wrote stories for sister publications LiveScience.com and Laptop Magazine. Her stories have been syndicated to various sites including CNN, Yahoo! News, MSNBC, ABC News, Fox News and CBS News. She also spent five years at a retail trade magazine writing about social media and technology, worked at ABC News in the Brian Ross investigative unit and got her start in journalism at CourtTV.com, where she reported on high-profile court cases. She’s a graduate of New York University with a degree in journalism.Samantha has taught English in Thailand, climbed Mt. Fuji in Japan and has a thing for pizza.

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