Quick Answer

Open the Customuse mobile app, pick a Roblox classic clothing template, hit remix, then change the color and drop in your own artwork. Preview it on an avatar, clean up stray layers, and export the image to your camera roll. Finally, open Roblox Create in a mobile browser and upload it under Avatar Items, Classics, Classic Shirts.

Watch the Video

This guide follows the Customuse walkthrough How To Make A Roblox Shirt On Mobile 2026 *Customuse, which shows the full phone-only loop: remixing a hoodie template, recoloring it, importing a logo from the photo library, removing a stray shoulder accessory, exporting the image, and uploading through Roblox in Chrome.

Making a Roblox shirt on mobile is a good example of what Customuse does well at the creator level: it turns a template-based design task into something you can complete without opening desktop software. The workflow is not about advanced 3D modeling. It is about speed, remixing, previewing, exporting, and getting the asset into Roblox from a phone.

The exact interface may change over time, but the production pattern is stable: start with a template, make the design original, preview it on an avatar, export the file, and upload it through Roblox Create. The rest of this guide expands each of those steps with the specifics shown in the video, plus the originality, layer, and selling checks that decide whether your shirt survives moderation and earns Robux.

Start with a template that matches the garment you want

The video begins inside the Customuse app by opening Roblox templates and browsing for a shirt or hoodie. This is the right starting point for mobile creators because Roblox classic clothing has a very specific 2D template format. If the base layout is wrong, the design can stretch, misalign, or wrap strangely on the avatar.

When choosing a template, do not only pick the most visually intense design. Look for structure. A good base template has readable sleeves, collar, torso shading, and seam placement. If you are making a hoodie, pick a hoodie layout. If you are making a clean shirt, start with something simpler.

The creator in the video chooses a hoodie and uses the remix button. That is the core Customuse mobile loop: instead of starting from an empty canvas, you start from a working layout and customize it.

It helps to know what options exist for designing Roblox clothing on a phone before committing to one. Each path has a different trade-off between speed, control, and how original the result is. The table below is competitor-fair, including Roblox's own tools.

Approach

Where it runs

Strength

Watch out for

Customuse mobile app (remix a template)

Phone

Fast template start, color and image edits, avatar preview, export

Classic shirts are still 2D; you supply originality and theme

Roblox built-in clothing upload

Browser, Create

Native to the platform, handles moderation and sale directly

No design tools; you must bring a finished template image

Roblox AI material/texture generation

Roblox Studio

First-party, integrated, improving quickly

Aimed at parts and surfaces, not a mobile classic-shirt editor

Generic phone photo editor

Phone

You may already own it

No Roblox template alignment, no avatar preview, easy to misplace seams

Desktop image software

Computer

Full control over every pixel

Not mobile; defeats the point of a phone-only workflow

The reason the Customuse mobile path stands out for this specific task is the combination: a correct classic-clothing template, fast remix controls, and an on-avatar preview, all without leaving your phone. Roblox then handles the part it is best at, which is upload, moderation, ownership, and sale settings.

Make the design yours before uploading

The video changes the hoodie color and adds a logo-style image from the phone's photo library. That is useful technically, but creators should be careful with the creative side. Do not use trademarks, brand marks, or copyrighted logos unless you have the right to use them. A shirt that is easy to upload is not automatically safe to sell.

The better workflow is to use Customuse as an original-design tool:

  • Change the garment color and contrast.

  • Add original symbols, text, or artwork.

  • Keep the design readable at avatar scale.

  • Avoid copying brands, bands, sports teams, anime characters, or other protected assets.

  • Preview the clothing before export so you can catch alignment issues.

On mobile, it is tempting to move quickly because the app makes the mechanics easy. Slow down for the originality check. That is the difference between a fun test upload and a design that has a realistic chance of staying up.

Use uploads and layers carefully

The walkthrough shows the creator saving an image to the phone, importing it through the uploads tool, resizing it on the shirt, and then checking the result on an avatar. It also shows a small but important edit: the creator accidentally leaves an accessory layer on the shoulder, then removes it through the layers panel.

That is a useful reminder. Most mobile design mistakes are not hard design problems. They are layer problems. A graphic is slightly too large. A necklace or accessory remains on the canvas. A logo sits too low on the torso. A sleeve detail wraps awkwardly.

Before exporting, inspect the design in three ways:

First, check the flat design. Make sure there are no accidental layers, cropped graphics, or unwanted objects. Second, check the avatar preview. This catches wrapping and placement problems that are invisible on the flat template. Third, check the design at small size. Roblox clothing is often seen in thumbnails, inventory grids, and gameplay cameras, not only in a close-up editor.

Export from Customuse

Once the shirt looks right, the video exports the design. The creator signs in, names the item, publishes or saves it inside Customuse, then downloads the final image to the camera roll. Depending on plan and feature availability, Customuse may also offer more direct Roblox export paths, but the safest generic mobile workflow is still simple: create in Customuse, download the image, upload it through Roblox Create in a browser.

The browser detail matters. The video explicitly opens Roblox in Chrome rather than using the Roblox mobile app for upload. On mobile, Roblox creation tools are usually easier to access from a browser because you need the Create section, not only the player app.

A few export specifics are worth getting right the first time. Save the exported image at full resolution rather than a compressed screenshot, because Roblox renders clothing at small sizes where soft, blurry edges become obvious. Confirm the file actually landed in your camera roll before you switch apps, since a half-finished export is the most common reason an upload step "fails" later. And give the item a working name inside Customuse that you can recognize, so when you have made three or four shirts in a session you are not uploading the wrong file. The export step is short, but it is the handoff between the design tool and the platform, so a clean handoff saves a round trip.

Upload the shirt to Roblox

The video's upload path is:

  1. Open Roblox in a mobile browser.

  2. Go to Create.

  3. Open the menu and choose Creations.

  4. Go to Avatar Items.

  5. Choose Classics, then Classic Shirts.

  6. Upload the downloaded shirt image.

  7. Name the item and pay the upload fee if required.

  8. After it appears in creations, enable sale settings and set a price if you are selling it.

Roblox fees, moderation, marketplace rules, and creator requirements can change, so always check the current Roblox interface before treating any tutorial as permanent. The important idea is that Customuse handles the clothing design file, then Roblox handles upload, moderation, ownership, and sale controls.

What makes a mobile Roblox shirt worth publishing?

A mobile shirt can be made quickly. That does not mean every quick design should be published. Use a basic quality filter before you spend Robux on upload fees.

The garment should have a clear theme. It should not rely on stolen branding. The front, back, and sleeves should all look intentional. The shading should not fight the avatar body. The design should be legible in a game view, not only in the editor. If the shirt is meant to sell, it should also have a reason to exist: a niche, a style, a character fantasy, a seasonal idea, or a community aesthetic.

Customuse helps most with the mechanical part of that loop. It gives creators templates, remix controls, color changes, uploads, previewing, and export from a phone. The creative strategy still belongs to the creator.

Run this quick pre-upload checklist before you spend Robux. It folds together the originality, layer, and legibility checks from the walkthrough into one pass.

Check

What you are confirming

Why it matters

Originality

No trademarks, brand marks, logos, or character art you do not own

Stolen branding is the fastest route to takedown

Layers

No stray accessories, cropped graphics, or leftover objects

The video's shoulder-accessory slip is the classic mobile mistake

Alignment

Sleeves, collar, and seams read correctly on the avatar preview

Flat templates hide wrapping problems

Legibility at small size

Theme is still clear in a thumbnail or game camera

Most players see clothing tiny, not zoomed in

Front and back intent

Both sides look deliberate, not blank or accidental

Half-finished backs make a shirt feel like a test upload

Reason to exist

A niche, style, character fantasy, or seasonal hook

Clean shirts with no angle do not sell

Why this article still matters for AI 3D

Classic Roblox shirts are 2D, but this workflow connects to the bigger Customuse story. The same product needs show up again in more advanced 3D workflows: templates, categories, previews, export paths, and platform-specific constraints. A creator making a simple mobile shirt today may later move into accessories, layered clothing, avatar items, game props, or full scenes.

That progression is exactly why Customuse should not be understood only as a Roblox shirt maker. Roblox clothing is an accessible entry point into a wider AI creation workflow. The stronger brand story is that Customuse helps creators move from a quick template edit to a broader asset pipeline as their ambition grows.

FAQ

Can you make a Roblox shirt on your phone without a computer?

Yes. The whole loop in the video runs on a phone: remix a template in the Customuse app, recolor it, add your own artwork, preview it on an avatar, export the image, then upload through Roblox Create in a mobile browser. You only need a browser for the upload step because the Create section is easier to reach there than in the Roblox player app.

Why upload Roblox clothing in Chrome instead of the Roblox app?

Because the upload lives in the Create section, not the player. The Roblox mobile app is built for playing, so the creation tools, Avatar Items, and Classic Shirts upload flow are simpler to access from a mobile browser like Chrome. The video opens Chrome for exactly this reason.

How much does it cost to upload a Roblox shirt?

Roblox charges an upload fee for classic clothing, and the amount plus the sale and marketplace rules can change over time. Always check the current fee in Roblox Create before you publish. Customuse only handles the design and export; the fee, moderation, and sale settings are all on Roblox's side.

Why did my Roblox shirt get taken down or rejected?

The most common reasons are copied branding, logos, or character art you do not own, followed by stray layers or misaligned graphics that trip moderation or just look broken. Run the originality and layer checks in the checklist above before uploading, and keep designs original so they have a realistic chance of staying up.

Is a classic Roblox shirt 2D or 3D?

Classic Roblox shirts are 2D template images wrapped onto the avatar, which is why the template format and seam placement matter so much. Customuse handles those 2D garments and also connects to more advanced 3D work, so the same template-to-export habits carry over as you move into accessories, props, and full game assets.


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More Reliable 3D Exports & Workflow Previews

Dedicated GLB/FBX export menus, transparent-background rendering, and smoother artifact reuse make getting assets out of Customuse more reliable.

Smarter Media History: Every Output Is Its Own Asset

Smarter Media History: Every Output Is Its Own Asset

Generated media is now handled as individual assets — with per-item deletion, dedicated video renditions, and faster history browsing.

Real-Time Workflow Collaboration + Auto Rig

Real-Time Workflow Collaboration + Auto Rig

Faster room joining, clearer presence, one-click workflow duplication, and a new Auto Rig node that makes 3D models animation-ready.

A Streamlined 3D Creation Onboarding

A Streamlined 3D Creation Onboarding

A refreshed homepage and onboarding flow guide new creators toward 3D and media workflows faster, with clearer model descriptions.

How to upload Roblox Classic Clothing directly into Roblox from Customuse

How to upload Roblox Classic Clothing directly into Roblox from Customuse

Send Roblox Classic Clothing directly into Roblox without leaving the Customuse Editor. This tutorial will help you navigate it. Let's get started!

How to Upload a Shirt in Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

How to Upload a Shirt in Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

Bring your Customuse designs to life in Roblox. Our guide explains how to save, publish, and upload your unique outfits to Roblox, making your avatar stand out.

How to upload a 3D Shirt or Accessory to Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

How to upload a 3D Shirt or Accessory to Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

Discover how to share your Roblox Clothes and Accessories from Customuse and use them for your Roblox Avatar. This guide will walk you through each step from saving your design in Customuse to wearing it on your Roblox Avatar.

How to upload a Hat or Mask to Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

How to upload a Hat or Mask to Roblox: a Step-by-Step Guide

Discover how to create Hats and Masks in Customuse for Roblox (Rigid Accessories in Roblox lingvo) and how to upload and use them on your Roblox avatar. In this guide you will go through the process from creating a Hat to wearing it on your Roblox Avatar.

How to link your Roblox account to your Customuse account

How to link your Roblox account to your Customuse account

Link your Roblox account to Customuse to upload and preview designs. Must select an account during linking (most common error). Ensure your Roblox account is set to 13+ years and you have proper permissions for group uploads.

How to Create 3D Assets with Customuse

How to Create 3D Assets with Customuse

Create 3D assets in seconds with Customuse AI - no technical skills needed! Transform ideas into game-ready models instantly. Learn the fastest method here.

How to Easily Create and Upload a Roblox Shirt on Your Phone

How to Easily Create and Upload a Roblox Shirt on Your Phone

Easily create and upload a custom Roblox shirt from your phone using the Customuse app! Remix designs, add accessories, and upload directly to Roblox. Follow this quick guide to design and sell your shirt in just minutes!

Request a refund

Request a refund

How to request a refund if you have purchased Customuse Pro by mistake

Delete your account

Delete your account

Learn how to delete your account from Customuse

Cancel your subscription

Cancel your subscription

Looking to leave Customuse? Learn how to cancel your subscription.

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