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Eclipse

Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade

A made-to-order Eclipse wardrobe module that turns a private suite corridor into a closed-front graphite glass dressing promenade.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Eclipse
Space
Wardrobe
Specifications
6

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Fadior Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade — 304 stainless steel wardrobe system, front view
Hero viewWardrobe
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Overview

About this piece

The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.

Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for owners planning a private dressing corridor, villa suite approach, or calm wardrobe promenade. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, glass rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, finish sample approval, lighting review, and project drawings.

The Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade gives the Eclipse series a direction that is separate from brass reveals, plaster porticos, mineral dressing islands, folding worktops, valet walls, pivot alcoves, smoked linen walls, and lattice dressing bays. This SKU focuses on a long closed-front route where dressing storage, corridor movement, and reflective glass planes work as one measured architectural surface.

The buyer problem is usually spatial discipline. A large suite may have enough length for wardrobe storage, yet the path between sleeping, bathing, and dressing can feel like a service corridor if the cabinet fronts are treated as ordinary doors. This module uses graphite glass rhythm, dark slim framing, cedar-warm depth, and a weathered stone end panel to turn the route into a deliberate promenade.

For designers, the first decision is the length of the glass run. The wardrobe should align with door locations, ceiling breaks, lighting slots, floor joints, and the first clear view from the private suite entrance. If the run is too short, the promenade idea disappears; if it is too long, the glass can feel repetitive. The Eclipse proposal works best when each vertical bay has a clear reason.

The module dimensions are 0.8 meters of base cabinet planning, 0.0 meters of wall cabinet planning, 5.2 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 0.0 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values, so this copy does not state a price, discount, package total, or promotion. Any change to the meter inputs should change the computed shop price.

The finish story is intentionally dark and quiet. Graphite glass gives a reflective surface without becoming mirror-like, slim black framing gives the wall a disciplined cadence, cedar warmth behind the glass keeps the wardrobe from feeling cold, and weathered stone at the end panel gives the promenade a grounded architectural stop. The result is tailored rather than decorative.

This wardrobe should be planned with reflection and privacy in mind. A glass-front dressing route can reveal too much if lighting, clothing density, or internal shadows are not controlled. Fadior should confirm glass tint, interior tone, LED temperature, hanging density, bay width, side returns, and whether the buyer wants the contents hinted at or kept nearly invisible from the suite path.

The image set keeps the product exterior-facing. Doors stay closed, mechanisms stay hidden, and the glass rhythm is shown as a finished wall rather than an open closet display. That discipline matters because this SKU sells a made-to-order planning idea for a private residence, not a retail-style wardrobe showcase or a freestanding cabinet.

Related Eclipse pages help clarify the choice. A brass reveal dressing niche is better when a small focal pause matters. A mineral dressing island is better when folded garments need a central object. A smoked linen wall is softer and quieter. Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade is different because circulation, closed fronts, reflection control, and long-suite alignment are the center of the decision.

International buyers should send corridor length, ceiling height, floor photos, doorway positions, preferred glass darkness, lighting plan, robe and garment volume, privacy expectations, and any view lines from the bedroom or bathroom. Those inputs let Fadior judge whether the glass should be darker, clearer, warmer, divided into narrower bays, or interrupted by a stone return.

The strongest version avoids visible clutter. The wardrobe promenade should feel composed when the room is quiet and should still feel ordered when daily dressing routines are active. Glass fronts can add depth, but they should not expose disorder. Dark framing can sharpen the composition, but it must not make the corridor feel narrow. The product succeeds when movement and storage feel intentionally joined.

Before production, Fadior should confirm site dimensions, wall structure, floor tolerance, ceiling line, lighting location, glass sample, frame color, stone sample, door swing clearances, delivery access, installation sequence, and final drawings. That practical review keeps the published design rendering aligned with a buildable made-to-order wardrobe module.

Lighting should be settled before the glass detail is approved. A wardrobe promenade can look uneven if downlights strike every glass bay differently or if reflected windows create glare across the whole run. The design should coordinate ceiling lights, interior wardrobe lighting, window reflection, and evening use so the graphite surface stays calm from both ends of the corridor.

The promenade should also be judged as a circulation object. In a busy household, one person may pass through while another opens the suite door, places a bag down, or prepares clothing nearby. Fadior should confirm clear walking width, handle strategy, opening direction, corner protection, and whether the end panel needs extra durability where movement turns.

Material samples matter because graphite glass, black framing, cedar tones, and weathered stone react differently to humidity, strong daylight, and nearby flooring. A sample board should be reviewed beside the actual floor and wall color, not only under showroom lighting. That review helps the buyer decide whether the route should feel darker, warmer, more transparent, or more architectural.

This SKU can also support a hospitality-level private suite without becoming commercial. A villa may need a calm route where luggage, garments, seasonal storage, and dressing preparation all remain controlled behind closed fronts. The graphite glass promenade gives that daily ritual a quiet visual boundary while still reading as part of the home rather than a boutique display.

Installation planning should include delivery path, panel sequence, glass protection, frame alignment, stone return setting, and final adjustment time. Long wardrobe elevations require careful staging because each bay must align across a visible continuous plane. If the wall is not straight, the design may need scribing, adjusted frame depth, or a revised end return before factory release.

The buyer should treat the published module as a precise starting point. It defines a wardrobe promenade, glass rhythm, material direction, and meter-based pricing inputs, but it does not replace the site survey. The final order should be based on measured drawings, approved finishes, access checks, lighting coordination, and a clear privacy plan for the dressing route.

The sales handoff should stay practical and visual. A buyer can send photos from both ends of the corridor, a short video walking the route, approximate garment volume, preferred privacy level, nearby switch positions, and the floor material. Those details help Fadior decide whether the glass bays should run full height, stop below a ceiling feature, turn a corner, or meet another cabinet module.

Final acceptance should check standing sightlines, reflected glare, glass darkness, bay spacing, door operation, frame consistency, cleaning access, stone return alignment, and whether the wardrobe remains calm when garments and daily objects sit behind the closed fronts.

During final review, the buyer should also compare the graphite glass under morning, afternoon, and evening light. This simple check prevents glare surprises, confirms privacy expectations, and helps the finished wardrobe promenade feel calm from every approach.

Fadior Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade — interior room context showing cabinet integration
Interior perspective01
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Visual interpretation

How this product reads at room scale

See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.

The image set presents the Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade as a finished exterior wardrobe route with closed graphite glass fronts, dark slim frames, cedar-warm depth, and a weathered stone end return.

The visual direction keeps the product closed and architectural, so buyers can judge proportion, reflection, privacy, and corridor discipline without seeing internal mechanisms or speculative fittings.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Graphite glass promenade

    Closed glass fronts create a long tailored wardrobe route while keeping the private suite calm and visually controlled.

  • Stone end-panel stop

    A weathered stone return gives the wardrobe elevation a grounded architectural endpoint.

  • Cedar-warm shadow depth

    Warm interior tone behind the glass softens the dark framing without turning the wardrobe into an open display.

  • Closed exterior presentation

    The module is shown as a finished wardrobe wall with closed surfaces, keeping internal details for project drawings.

Materials and finish

Material choices that support the design language.

Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.

Surface finishes

  • Graphite glass wardrobe fronts
  • Matte-black slim framing
  • Weathered stone end panel

Color options

Matte black frame#3A3A38
Weathered stone#7B7261
Dry-grass khaki#A89A78
Fadior Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade — close-up of stainless steel finish and hardware detail
Finish and detail02
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.
Fadior Eclipse Wardrobe Suite with Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade — lifestyle setting with natural light and residential
Adaptation study03
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Customization

Adapting this product for your home

This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.

Fadior can adjust glass darkness, bay width, frame depth, stone return placement, cedar tone, lighting coordination, and door operation after site measurement. Buyers should confirm corridor length, view lines, privacy expectations, garment volume, cleaning needs, and delivery access before drawings move to production.

Specifications

Technical specifications

The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.

SeriesEclipse
CategoryWardrobe
DifferentiatorGraphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade
Production modelMade to order in Foshan, China
Production lead timeApproximately 30 days after approved drawings
Pricing basisFormula uses base, wall, tall, and countertop meter inputs

Quick facts

Verifiable facts, at a glance.

Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.

Quick reference facts about this Fadior product.
ClaimValueStandardContext
Made-to-order productionManufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead timeShop SKU disclosurePlaced in first description paragraph
Design rendering disclosureProduct imagery shown is a design renderingShop SKU disclosurePlaced in customer-facing copy and FAQ
Series bindingEclipseSanity catalogSeries comes from live Sanity catalog
Category bindingWardrobeShared daily planFirst planned category for the 2026-07-16 shopnew schedule
DifferentiatorGraphite Glass Wardrobe PromenadeSlug contractTitle, slug, and content use the same differentiator
Slugeclipse-graphite-glass-wardrobe-promenade-in-eclipseShop SKU namingFollows series-differentiator-in-series shape
Module dimensions0.8 m base, 0.0 m wall, 5.2 m tall, 0.0 m countertopFormula pricing inputPublisher computes price from these inputs
Existing-product distinctionNot a dressing niche, portico, island, worktop, valet wall, pivot alcove, smoked linen wall, or lattice baySeries existing-products reviewFocuses on a closed graphite glass promenade
Buyer use caseVilla dressing corridor or private suite routeCommercial intentSupports made-to-order planning
Image acceptanceFour approved generated product images across 1:1, 4:3, and 16:9 rolesShop image setBuilt from accepted product image outputs
Privacy planningGraphite glass needs tint, reflection, lighting, and garment-density reviewBuyer decision supportUnique to wardrobe promenade use
Related-page distinctionDifferent from Eclipse niche, island, valet, pivot, linen, and lattice pagesInternal linking intentPrevents duplicate product angle

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.

Is this a ready-made wardrobe product?+

No. This SKU is a made-to-order planning module for a closed-front wardrobe promenade, not a ready-made cabinet. Fadior uses the published concept to start the buyer conversation, then confirms site dimensions, glass darkness, lighting position, finish samples, door clearances, delivery access, and installation sequence before factory drawings and production are approved for the project. These checks keep the ordering process practical, measurable, and aligned with real residential use.

Where does the Graphite Glass Wardrobe Promenade work best?+

It works best in a villa dressing corridor, private suite approach, walk-in wardrobe route, or calm bedroom-to-bath transition where a long cabinet wall should feel architectural rather than repetitive. The product is less about adding a display closet and more about controlling reflection, privacy, storage rhythm, and movement through a tailored residential route. These checks keep the ordering process practical, measurable, and aligned with real residential use.

What should buyers confirm before ordering?+

Buyers should confirm corridor length, ceiling height, floor tolerance, doorway positions, lighting temperature, glass tint preference, garment volume, privacy expectations, delivery access, and whether the wardrobe elevation needs a stone end return. These details affect bay width, frame depth, reflection control, interior shadow, door operation, and whether the promenade feels calm during daily use. These checks keep the ordering process practical, measurable, and aligned with real residential use.

Will the final product match the images exactly?+

The images are a design rendering that shows material mood, glass rhythm, and spatial intent. The final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, sample approval, lighting review, local installation conditions, and project drawings. That review is important because graphite glass, dark frames, and stone returns are judged closely under real residential light. These checks keep the ordering process practical, measurable, and aligned with real residential use.

Eclipse Wardrobe | 304 Stainless Steel | FADIOR HOME