Company Performance Metrics
Maison Roboto makes clothing for humanoid robots.
The company designs and produces garments built specifically for the mechanical anatomy of commercial robot platforms. Product lines cover Tesla Optimus, Figure 03, XPeng Iron, Unitree G1, Agility Digit, and Boston Dynamics Atlas. Each platform gets its own patterns because no two robots move the
same way.
The engineering matters as much as the design. A robot shoulder rotates 270 degrees. Motor controllers run hot enough to degrade standard fabrics in weeks. Sensors need to see through the textile. Every garment accounts for joint clearance, thermal output, static discharge, and sensor placement specific to its target platform. The team 3D scans each robot model and generates patterns from that data.
The commercial case is straightforward. Humanoid robots are moving into hotels, hospitals, retail floors, and corporate lobbies. An unclothed robot reads as industrial equipment. A properly dressed robot reads as staff. That difference affects how people interact with the machine, and it affects whether the deployment succeeds or gets pulled.
Maison Roboto sells through its own e-commerce platform with published pricing. The company serves both corporate fleet operators and individual buyers. Individual buyers commission bespoke pieces, that are handmade with an attention to detail normally attributed to Saville Row. Product categories include formal tailoring, workwear, protective covers, eventwear, and platform-specific accessories.
Luxury organic materials come from mills in France, Italy, and Japan, and high-performance materials are sourced globally. Most of it is custom produced to specifications that did not exist before the company wrote them, because nobody had needed fabric engineered for robotic bodies before.
Maison Roboto is headquartered in Paris, France. The company sells and ships internationally. The site runs in English, French, Japanese, Korean, and Arabic.
The company is actively seeking partnerships with robot manufacturers, fleet operators, and luxury or premium hospitality groups deploying humanoid platforms.