Creating a shirt in Roblox sounds simple at first. Then you open the template, stare at a confusing grid of boxes, and suddenly feel like you are solving a fashion puzzle designed by a mischievous cube. The good news is that making a Roblox shirt is absolutely doable, even if you are a beginner, as long as you understand the process from start to finish.
This guide walks you through exactly how to create a shirt in Roblox, from downloading the official template to designing, testing, uploading, and optionally selling your shirt. Along the way, you will also learn the difference between a classic shirt, a T-shirt, and newer 3D layered clothing, because Roblox clothing categories love to keep creators on their toes.
If your goal is to make a clean custom outfit, avoid blurry graphics, and keep your sleeves from looking like they were pasted on during a thunderstorm, this is the Roblox shirt guide you need.
What a Roblox Shirt Actually Is
Before you start designing, it helps to know what you are creating. In Roblox, a classic shirt is a 2D clothing item that wraps around the avatar’s torso and arms. That is different from a classic T-shirt, which is just a single image placed on the front of the torso. It is also different from layered clothing, which is newer 3D apparel.
So if you want a full top with front, back, sleeves, and side panels, you are making a classic shirt. That is the item this tutorial focuses on.
What You Need Before You Start
To create a shirt in Roblox, you do not need a design degree, a cinematic soundtrack, or a secret lab. You do need a few basics:
- A Roblox account
- An image editor such as Photoshop, GIMP, Pixlr, Canva, or another editor that lets you work with layers
- The official Roblox shirt template
- A shirt design idea, even if it starts as “hoodie, but cool”
- Enough Robux to pay the upload fee
One important update: older tutorials often say Roblox T-shirts upload for free. That information is outdated. Current Roblox documentation says uploading 2D avatar items, including shirts, pants, and T-shirts, requires a 10 Robux upload fee per submission. In plain English, every upload attempt counts, so it pays to test before you publish.
Step 1: Download the Official Roblox Shirt Template
Your first move is to get the official shirt template from Roblox Creator Hub. This template is the map that tells Roblox which part of your image belongs on the front, back, top, bottom, and sleeves of the shirt.
Do not freestyle the canvas size unless you genuinely enjoy preventable problems. Use the official template so your design lines up correctly on the avatar.
Roblox’s classic clothing layout uses a combination of panel sizes. For example, the front and back torso sections are large squares, some sleeve and side sections are tall rectangles, and some top or bottom areas are wide rectangles. You do not have to memorize every dimension by heart, but you do need to keep the template at its original size and design within the correct sections.
Step 2: Understand How the Template Works
This is the part beginners often rush, and then later wonder why their cool jacket zipper ended up on the left elbow.
A Roblox shirt template is not one flat shirt image. It is a folded layout that wraps around a 3D avatar. Each box on the template corresponds to a body surface:
- Front torso is the chest area
- Back torso is the back of the shirt
- Side torso panels wrap around the body
- Arm panels create the sleeves
- Top and bottom panels cover upper and lower edges
If you are designing a hoodie, for example, the zipper belongs on the front torso. The hood shading may be suggested around the upper torso panels. Sleeve stripes must be aligned carefully on the arm sections. Small mistakes on a flat image become giant “what happened here?” moments on a 3D avatar.
Step 3: Create Your Shirt Design
Now for the fun part. Open the template in your image editor and start designing. You can make almost anything that fits Roblox rules: hoodies, uniforms, sports jerseys, sweaters, jackets, casual tops, themed outfits, or matching group clothing.
Start with the Main Body
Begin with the front and back torso. Pick a base color first. Then add details like stitching, pockets, logos, folds, shading, or trim. If you are new, simple designs usually look better than overcrowded ones. A clean black hoodie with white drawstrings often looks sharper than a shirt trying to be a galaxy, a tuxedo, a fire effect, and a meme all at once.
Move to the Sleeves
After the torso looks right, design the sleeves. This is where symmetry matters. If you want matching sleeves, copy and mirror carefully. If you want one sleeve to have a patch or stripe, double-check placement so it looks intentional rather than like your mouse sneezed.
Add Depth with Shading
Flat colors can work, but subtle shading makes a Roblox shirt look more polished. Add slightly darker tones near the edges, under the arms, or where folds would naturally fall. You do not need to turn it into a Renaissance painting. Just enough contrast to make the shirt look finished.
Use Transparency Wisely
PNG is usually the best file type for Roblox shirts because it supports transparency. That means you can intentionally leave some areas clear if you want the avatar body to show through. This can be useful for short sleeves, layered looks, or cutout details. Just be careful. Too much transparency can make your shirt look incomplete or weirdly floating, which is not the fashion statement most creators are going for.
Step 4: Save the File the Right Way
Roblox accepts several image types for clothing uploads, including GIF, PNG, and JPG. Still, PNG is the safest choice for most creators because it preserves crisp details and transparency.
When saving your file:
- Keep the template size unchanged
- Export the design clearly without stretching or compressing it oddly
- Use a clean file name so you can find it later
- Make sure no editor guides or hidden layer notes accidentally export with the image
A good file name might be black-zip-hoodie-v2.png. A less helpful file name is final-final-actual-final-please-work.png, though many creators have emotionally been there.
Step 5: Test the Shirt in Roblox Studio Before You Upload
This step can save Robux, frustration, and dramatic sighing.
Roblox allows creators to test classic clothing in Roblox Studio before uploading or selling it. That means you can preview how your shirt looks on a rig, catch alignment problems, and make corrections before paying the upload fee.
A simple testing workflow looks like this:
- Open Roblox Studio
- Create a blank project, such as a Baseplate
- Insert a character rig using the Build Rig tool
- Add a Shirt object to the rig
- Apply your shirt design for preview
- Rotate the camera and inspect the front, back, and sleeves
Look closely at the seams. Check whether your front and side panels connect cleanly. Make sure sleeve patterns line up. Text on clothing should sit where you expect it to sit and not drift halfway into the shoulder. Testing first is not optional if you care about quality. It is the difference between “nice shirt” and “why is the pocket on the spine?”
Step 6: Upload the Shirt to Roblox
Once the design looks right, you are ready to upload it through Roblox’s current classic clothing workflow.
- Go to the Roblox creator area and open Avatar Items
- Select the Classics tab
- Use the Classic Type dropdown to choose Shirt
- Name your item clearly
- Choose your saved image file
- Confirm the upload and pay the required Robux fee
After that, Roblox will review the item. This moderation step is normal. If your shirt is approved, it will appear in your creations and you can wear it. If you want to sell it, you can configure the item and set it up according to Roblox’s selling rules and marketplace policies.
Step 7: Follow Roblox Rules Before You Sell
Creating a shirt is one thing. Keeping it live is another.
Roblox marketplace items must follow platform rules. That includes content guidelines, moderation standards, and intellectual property policies. In practical terms, do not upload copyrighted logos, stolen art, explicit graphics, or designs clearly meant to copy another creator’s work. That is not “inspiration.” That is a speedrun to moderation trouble.
Also remember that classic clothing is not universal across every avatar style. Roblox notes that many user-generated marketplace avatars do not support 2D classic clothing well. So if your shirt looks amazing on a classic-compatible body but odd on another avatar, that may be a compatibility issue, not necessarily a design disaster.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
If you want your Roblox shirt to look professional, avoid these common errors:
Using the Wrong Clothing Type
Many people mean “shirt” when they actually want a simple front graphic. If that is your goal, a T-shirt may be enough. But if you want sleeves and a fully wrapped design, you need a classic shirt.
Stretching the Template
Resizing the template incorrectly is one of the easiest ways to break your design. Keep the original proportions intact.
Ignoring Seams
Front and side panels must connect visually. If a stripe begins on the torso, it should continue naturally around the body when appropriate.
Overloading the Design
Too many colors, too many logos, and too many effects can make the shirt harder to read. Strong Roblox clothing often has a clear main idea and a few supporting details.
Uploading Without Testing
This is the classic beginner move. It is also the expensive one. Preview your shirt first.
Pro Tips to Make Your Roblox Shirt Look Better
- Use layers so you can edit sleeves, torso, and details separately
- Zoom in often because tiny alignment mistakes become obvious on an avatar
- Keep text minimal unless the design specifically needs it
- Study existing clothing styles to understand how shading and seams are handled
- Make versions of your design, such as one clean version and one version with extra details
- Name files clearly so revisions do not become chaos
If you plan to build a clothing catalog, consistency matters too. Matching colors, repeated design language, and recognizable themes can make your shop feel more professional and easier for buyers to remember.
Real-World Creator Experiences: What First-Timers Usually Learn the Hard Way
One of the most common experiences new Roblox clothing creators have is realizing that a shirt can look great in a flat editor and still look strange on an avatar. That is not failure. It is almost a rite of passage. A front panel may feel perfectly centered in your editor, then appear too high once it wraps onto the torso. Sleeve cuffs that looked clean on the template may suddenly feel uneven in 3D. The first lesson many creators learn is that Roblox shirt design is not really flat design. It is surface mapping. Once that clicks, everything gets easier.
Another common experience is underestimating how much difference tiny adjustments make. Moving a logo down a few pixels, softening a shadow, or cleaning up a seam between the torso and sleeve can completely change how professional a shirt feels. Beginners often think improvement means adding more detail. In reality, improvement often means editing with restraint. A cleaner collar edge or better-matched sleeve pattern can do more than ten extra effects.
Many creators also go through a phase of making shirts that are too ambitious too soon. They try to design glowing armor, layered streetwear, anime-inspired jackets, neon trim, tactical belts, and dramatic gradients all on the same template. The result is usually a shirt that feels noisy rather than impressive. With experience, creators tend to simplify. They learn to make one idea the star and let the rest support it. A strong hoodie with excellent shading often outperforms a chaotic “everything bagel” shirt.
There is also the emotional side of the process. The first successful upload is oddly satisfying. Seeing your own design appear on an avatar feels like a small creative win, even if it is just a plain varsity jacket or a simple black tee with a subtle chest graphic. It goes from “image on a template” to “something wearable in a game world,” and that transition is motivating. For a lot of users, that moment is what turns shirt design from a one-time experiment into an actual hobby.
Then comes the marketplace learning curve. Some creators expect their first shirt to sell immediately, and when it does not, they assume the design is bad. Usually, the problem is not that simple. Discovery, pricing, presentation, trend awareness, and consistency all matter. Creators who keep improving, organize their uploads well, and build a recognizable style usually learn more from their first ten shirts than from their first “perfect” one. In other words, experience in Roblox clothing design is not about getting everything right the first time. It is about testing, adjusting, learning what looks good on different avatars, and gradually developing an eye for what players actually want to wear.
Final Thoughts
If you have been wondering how to create a shirt in Roblox, the process is not hard once you break it into steps: get the official template, design carefully, preview the shirt in Roblox Studio, upload it through the classic clothing workflow, and follow marketplace rules if you want to sell it.
The biggest secret is not secret at all: great Roblox clothing usually comes from patience, not magic. Test your seams. Keep your design readable. Use the right template. And remember that the first version does not need to be legendary. It just needs to be good enough to teach you what to improve next.
Before long, you will stop fighting the template and start using it like a pro. At that point, your Roblox avatar will finally be wearing something made by you, which is honestly a lot cooler than buying the fifteenth random shirt with a flame pattern and mysterious clipping issues.

