Maison Roboto Paris

Robot Wardrobe Programs

A single outfit is not enough. Robots operate across shifting contexts, audiences, and environments throughout a single day. A robot wardrobe is a coordinated system of garments that ensures your machine is always dressed for the moment, with clean rotation stock, maintenance protocols, and seasonal refreshes built in.

Why Your Robot Needs a Wardrobe

The first humanoid robots to enter workplaces arrived with a single outfit or none at all. Organizations quickly discovered the limitation. A robot that greets visitors in the lobby at 9am might assist on the warehouse floor at noon and attend a client dinner at 7pm. Each context demands different materials, different silhouettes, and different messaging. A bare chassis or a single well-worn garment communicates that the robot is an afterthought. A well-managed robot wardrobe communicates investment, professionalism, and care.

Research in human-robot interaction confirms what hospitality professionals have always understood: presentation matters. Robots dressed appropriately for their context receive higher trust ratings, longer engagement times, and more positive feedback from the people they interact with. A robot wardrobe is not a vanity project. It is infrastructure for successful human-robot collaboration.

What a Robot Wardrobe Includes

Every robot wardrobe we design begins with a deployment audit. We map the robot's weekly schedule, the environments it moves through, and the audiences it faces. From there, we build a wardrobe system organized around deployment contexts rather than individual garments.

A typical corporate robot wardrobe might include:

Daily Professional Wear (2-3 pieces): Structured suiting or business casual from our Executive Protocol collection. These are the workhorse pieces the robot wears most days, designed for durability and easy maintenance. Multiple options ensure clean rotation while garments are being cleaned or serviced.

Client-Facing Formal (1-2 pieces): Elevated options for board meetings, client presentations, and executive-floor deployment. Premium textiles, precise tailoring, and finishing details that read as distinguished from close range.

Casual and Domestic (1-2 pieces): For robots operating in personal homes, employee lounges, or relaxed campus environments. Softer materials and approachable silhouettes from our Maison Privee line.

Event and Spectacle (1 piece): A statement garment for trade shows, brand activations, or media appearances from our Event Spectacle collection. Not worn daily, but essential when the robot needs to command a room.

Service and Utility (1-2 pieces): Functional garments for physical tasks, warehouse support, or outdoor deployment from our Industrial Luxe line. Reinforced, weather-resistant, and high-visibility when needed.

Robot Wardrobe by Platform

Each humanoid platform presents unique wardrobe considerations. Garments are not interchangeable between platforms. A Tesla Optimus wardrobe and a Figure 03 wardrobe share a design philosophy but differ in every pattern, every cut, and every engineering detail.

Tesla Optimus: The most commonly commissioned robot wardrobe. Optimus's near-human proportions accept traditional tailoring approaches adapted for its 40 degrees of freedom. Wardrobe pieces accommodate 270-degree shoulder rotation, rear battery access, and the distributed sensor array. Most Optimus wardrobes begin with the Executive Protocol collection and expand from there.

Figure 03: Figure's design emphasizes fluid upper-body movement and integrated camera systems. Wardrobe pieces use articulated shoulder and elbow construction with sensor-transparent panels at the head and chest. The slimmer frame benefits from tailored silhouettes that accentuate the platform's refined proportions.

Boston Dynamics Atlas: Atlas wardrobes must accommodate the most extreme range of motion in the humanoid category. Garments use high-stretch, tear-resistant fabrics rated for the rapid accelerations and direction changes Atlas performs. Every piece undergoes dynamic stress testing before delivery.

1X NEO: NEO is designed primarily for domestic environments, so wardrobe programs tend toward soft, approachable garments. The Maison Privee line is the most popular starting point, with casual pieces that help NEO integrate into household environments naturally.

Unitree G1: G1's compact frame and cost-efficient deployment model make it common in fleet scenarios. Wardrobe programs for G1 fleets emphasize visual consistency across units, rapid changeover, and durability for high-volume service roles.

Fleet Wardrobe Management

Organizations deploying multiple robots face a wardrobe management challenge that single-unit owners do not. When ten or twenty robots share a lobby, a hotel, or a campus, their wardrobes must look intentionally coordinated. Individual pieces may differ by role or department, but the overall visual language must be consistent.

Our fleet wardrobe management service handles this at scale. We create a digital fit profile for every unit. We maintain a garment inventory with automated reorder triggers. We schedule seasonal refreshes so the entire fleet updates simultaneously. And we provide an emergency replacement pipeline that delivers matching garments within 48 hours for standard items.

Mixed-platform fleets receive special attention. A lobby might use Figure 03 units while the mailroom runs on Unitree G1. The wardrobe design ensures both platforms look like they belong to the same organization, with matching colorways, compatible textiles, and aligned branding, even though the underlying garment engineering is entirely different.

The Wardrobe Consultation Process

Building a robot wardrobe starts with a conversation. We need to understand your robot's deployment context, your organization's brand standards, and your operational requirements. From there, our design team develops a wardrobe proposal: a curated collection of garments organized by context, with material specifications, color options, and pricing for each piece.

Once approved, production begins in our Paris atelier. Fabrics are sourced globally, including from France, Italy, and Japan. Most materials are custom developed in-house to meet the specific thermal, sensor-transparency, and articulation requirements of robotic garments. Construction follows our standard protocol: 3D scan or specification-based patterning, hand cutting, machine and hand assembly, and full engineering validation before shipping.

A starter wardrobe of 4 to 6 pieces typically takes 4 to 8 weeks from consultation to delivery. Expansion pieces and replacements ship faster, since the base patterns and fit profiles are already established.

Investment

Robot wardrobe programs begin at EUR 8,500 for a starter collection of 4 core pieces. Full wardrobe programs with 8 to 12 pieces, seasonal refresh, and maintenance service start at EUR 18,000 annually. Fleet pricing is available for organizations deploying 5 or more units.

View our pricing page for detailed breakdowns by collection and platform, or contact the atelier for a custom wardrobe proposal.

Build Your Robot Wardrobe

Start with a conversation about your robot's world. We will design the wardrobe to match.

Request a Wardrobe Consultation Try the Configurator

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