Design a full team kit — shirt, shorts, socks, crest, name and number — and see it from every angle in about ten minutes.
Coming soon to theApp StoreKitline is a jersey maker for iPhone and iPad. Pick a sport, choose your colors, and drag to rotate the strip front to back so you can see the nameplate, the number, and the sleeve stripe from every angle before anything gets printed.
It builds the whole uniform, not just the shirt — shorts, socks, and a helmet where the sport calls for one. Type any name and any number from 1 to 99, import your club logo from Photos, and preview the kit live as you change base colors, stripe styles, and crests.
Kitline works fully offline. When the design is done, export a transparent PNG, an on-card PNG, or a full-resolution vector PDF you can hand straight to a print shop.
Design shirt, shorts, socks, and helmet together, then drag to rotate the strip front to back in a live preview.
Type any name on the nameplate and any number from 1 to 99, styled to match the kit.
Import a logo from your photos and remove its background right on your device — no editing app needed.
Pick a base color, a stripe pattern, and a crest, and watch the whole uniform update instantly.
Export a transparent PNG, an on-card PNG, or a vector PDF at full resolution.
Soccer, hockey, baseball and more — with an on-device team-name generator that needs no internet.
Choose soccer, hockey, baseball, or another sport, and Kitline lays out the right uniform pieces — including a helmet where the game calls for one.
Set base colors, choose a stripe style, add a crest or import your own logo, and type the name and number.
Drag the strip to spin it front to back. Check the nameplate, the number, and the sleeve stripes from every side.
Save a transparent PNG, an on-card PNG, or a vector PDF and send it to your print shop or group chat.
Yes. Kitline lets you type any name onto the nameplate and any number from 1 to 99, styled to match the rest of the kit. You see the result on a live, rotatable model of the shirt, so you know exactly how the back will look.
Most jersey tools stop at the shirt, but a real kit is shirt, shorts, and socks — plus a helmet in sports like hockey or baseball. Kitline designs all the pieces together on one canvas so the colors and stripes stay consistent across the whole uniform.
In Kitline you drag to rotate the strip front to back, so the nameplate, number, and sleeve stripes are visible from every angle. Catching a misplaced stripe or a cramped nameplate on screen is much cheaper than catching it after the print run.
Import the logo from your photo library and Kitline removes its background on device, so the crest sits cleanly on the fabric instead of inside a white box. Then place it on the chest and preview it live as you change kit colors.
Print shops usually want a high-resolution image or a vector file. Kitline exports a transparent PNG, an on-card presentation PNG, and a full-resolution vector PDF — the vector PDF scales to any print size without losing sharpness, which is what sublimation printers prefer.
That is exactly what Kitline is for. Organizers can mock up the full uniform, share the export with the team for feedback, and settle on colors and crest before committing to a print shop order.
Yes. Kitline runs fully offline on iPhone and iPad — designing, background removal, the team-name generator, and exporting all happen on the device. You can design a kit on a plane or at a pitch with no signal.
Yes. Kitline covers multiple sports, and the uniform adapts to each one — hockey and baseball kits include a helmet, while soccer kits get shirt, shorts, and socks. The design tools stay the same across sports.
Type the person's name and their favorite number, pick their colors, and export the design. Parents use Kitline to mock up a personalized shirt before ordering it printed, so the gift looks right the first time.
Yes — dreaming up your own club is half the fun. Kitline includes an on-device team-name generator for inspiration, and you can design the crest, colors, and full strip for a club that exists only in your head.
Sublimation printing dyes the design into the fabric itself, so it needs clean, high-resolution artwork — ideally vector. Kitline's vector PDF export gives a sublimation shop artwork that scales perfectly to any shirt size.
Yes. Kitline runs on both iPhone and iPad, and the bigger iPad canvas is a comfortable place to fine-tune stripes and crest placement. Designs export at full resolution from either device.
Your team, your colors, your number — designed in ten calm minutes.
Coming soon to theApp Store