Surface finishes
- Satin ivory wardrobe doors
- Linen-textured inset panels
- Warm oak handle reveal
- Pale limestone plinth
- Soft linen dressing surface
Lumiere
A made-to-order Lumiere wardrobe module for low-glare formal garment storage behind calm closed faces.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Lumiere Wardrobe Suite with Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for homeowners who need a calm closed wardrobe module for formal garments, keepsake textiles, and low-glare morning dressing. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary after measurement, sample approval, and project drawings.
The Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern gives Lumiere a direction that is separate from its existing dressing gallery, pocket wall, valet datum, pivot wall, travel packing wall, and soft-glow dressing gallery. Instead of another broad display zone, this SKU centers on a closed garment bay with softer light control for special clothing and textile pieces that should stay protected from daily visual clutter.
The buyer problem is specific. Many wardrobes solve hanging volume but leave formal garments, folded ceremonial pieces, garment bags, scarves, and delicate accessories in mixed storage. The result can be a room that looks quiet from the doorway but becomes difficult to use when a homeowner prepares for travel, events, or seasonal rotation.
This module treats those pieces as a planned storage category. Tall closed fronts hold garments, a lower closed run gives staging volume, and the warm oak reveal line marks the trousseau zone without exposing personal items. The exterior stays composed, so the wardrobe reads as architecture rather than a retail display case.
Lumiere already carries a lighter residential character than many darker wardrobe series. Satin ivory doors, linen-textured insets, warm oak reveals, and pale limestone planning language make the module feel soft without becoming decorative. The finish direction supports bedrooms, dressing corridors, and primary-suite entries where glare and harsh contrast would feel out of place.
The module dimensions are 2.4 meters of base cabinet planning, 0.6 meters of wall cabinet planning, 3.6 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 0.8 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.
For designers, the first decision is what belongs in the trousseau bay. Formal garments, delicate folded pieces, heirloom textiles, garment bags, scarves, and occasion accessories need a different storage rhythm from everyday shirts and trousers. The bay should be mapped from the owner's real routines rather than from a generic wardrobe diagram.
Low-glare planning matters because delicate clothing is often reviewed at close range. Harsh lighting can distort ivory, cream, champagne, and linen tones, while deep shadows can make small details hard to check. The strongest version uses soft concealed illumination, serviceable access, and closed faces that keep the room quiet when the light is off.
The module should avoid open display. Visible garment bags, glass shelves, jewelry trays, and exposed rails can look attractive in one image but quickly expose dust and private belongings. This SKU is stronger when the exterior remains closed and the useful organization is resolved inside the technical drawings.
A measured survey should define hanger heights, fold depths, tray clearances, garment-bag length, internal airflow, and lighting access before production. Those details determine whether the bay protects the owner's items or simply repeats a standard closet with softer materials.
Fadior should confirm the finish samples under the room's real light before factory release. Ivory, linen, oak, and limestone tones can shift under cool daylight, warm lamps, reflected flooring, and nearby wall color. A sample review helps the final wardrobe stay aligned with the bedroom palette rather than relying only on the public page image.
The Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern is also useful for couples who share one dressing area but store different formal pieces. One side can hold longer garments and covered keepsakes, while the other can support folded textiles, scarves, and travel-ready garment bags. Closed exterior faces keep those decisions private.
For compact primary suites, the idea can compress into a single trousseau bay beside full-height wardrobe storage. For larger homes, it can expand into a dressing corridor with a closed staging counter and matching tall units. The key is not the exact room size; the key is giving delicate or occasional garments a deliberate location.
The final quotation should follow measured site conditions, finish choices, internal storage design, concealed lighting requirements, and accessory specification. If those decisions change, the drawings and computed price should change with them. The page presents a serious product direction for discussion, not a pretend fixed cabinet kit.
Commercially, the SKU gives the sales team a sharper first question than a generic wardrobe inquiry: which formal garments and keepsake textiles need protection, and how should the owner inspect them without creating glare or display clutter? That question quickly separates a real dressing-room plan from a loose inspiration image.
The exterior language should remain disciplined. Adding extra open cubbies, bright mirror planes, decorative pulls, or contrast trims would weaken the reason this SKU exists. The best version looks calm from across the room and rewards close use with accurate heights, soft light, tactile reveals, and dependable storage logic.
This makes the SKU practical for international projects where the first conversation happens remotely. The listing gives enough specificity to start a serious quote discussion: series, category, differentiator, measured planning inputs, production disclosure, visual disclosure, and the daily-use problem. The next step is confirming measurements, inventory, and finish samples so factory drawings can become precise.
A useful measurement meeting should inventory event garments before discussing finish upgrades. Count long dresses, suits, scarves, garment bags, folded keepsakes, seasonal textiles, and travel cases, then decide which items need tall hanging, shallow trays, soft dividers, or a lower closed staging run. This prevents the trousseau bay from becoming only a mood feature.
The module also needs a clear relationship to the rest of the suite. If it sits near the bed, silent hardware and low light spill matter more than display impact. If it sits in a separate dressing corridor, it can become the transition between everyday storage and occasional formal storage. Either way, the page frames the decision around careful use rather than surface styling alone.
For homeowners comparing several Lumiere concepts, this SKU is the one to choose when delicate formal storage and glare control are the pain points. A dressing gallery may solve general storage, a pocket wall may solve compact access, and a travel packing wall may solve suitcase preparation. The Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern solves the quieter problem of protecting special garments while keeping the wardrobe visually composed.
The product page should therefore be read as a planning brief. It names the series, category, differentiator, formula-pricing dimensions, production location, lead time, and visual expectations in one place so the homeowner, designer, contractor, and Fadior factory team can discuss the same direction before drawings are finalized.
During design review, Fadior should also decide how the low-glare bay is protected when the room is used at night. A primary suite may need softer switching, separate service access, and a finish sample checked beside bedding, flooring, and wall color. A dressing corridor may need stronger task light but still avoid glare on pale fabric. These decisions are small, but they are the difference between a beautiful wardrobe image and a module that works every week for formal clothing care.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The image set presents the Lumiere module as a soft ivory wardrobe with linen-textured insets, warm oak reveal lines, and a closed trousseau bay. The hero image uses a white commerce background so the SKU can stand clearly in shopping surfaces.
The gallery keeps the same exterior language across room, detail, and lifestyle views. No image relies on open doors, visible clothing, labels, or display storage, which protects the product calm residential intent.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Closed Trousseau Bay
A dedicated closed zone protects formal garments, scarves, garment bags, and delicate folded pieces without exposing personal storage.
Low-Glare Light Planning
Soft concealed illumination can be specified during drawings so the owner can inspect garments without harsh reflection.
Linen-Textured Door Rhythm
Warm linen insets and satin ivory faces keep the wardrobe calm while giving the Lumiere module a tactile surface language.
Measured Wardrobe Inputs
Base, wall, tall, and countertop meters give the sales conversation a clear formula-pricing starting point.
Materials and finish
Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.
Surface finishes
Color options


Customization
This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.
Customize hanger heights, garment-bag depth, folded textile trays, lighting access, drawer dividers, handle reveal, door texture, and sample finishes after site measurement. Keep the trousseau bay closed so the module remains calm and practical.
For larger suites, Fadior can extend the bay into a dressing corridor or pair it with a closed staging counter. For smaller rooms, it can compress into one formal-garment bay beside full-height wardrobe storage.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Lumiere |
|---|---|
| Category | Wardrobe |
| Differentiator | Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern |
| Module dimensions | 2.4 m base, 0.6 m wall, 3.6 m tall, 0.8 m countertop |
| Production location | Foshan, China |
| Primary use | Primary suite, dressing corridor, formal garment storage, and closed wardrobe planning |
Quick facts
Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.
| Claim | Value | Standard | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made-to-order production | Manufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in the first description paragraph for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in customer-facing copy for buyer transparency |
| Series binding | Lumiere | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Wardrobe | Shared daily plan | First planned category for the 2026-07-09 shopnew schedule |
| Differentiator | Low-Glare Trousseau Lantern | Slug contract | Title, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | lumiere-low-glare-trousseau-lantern-in-lumiere | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Module dimensions | 2.4 m base, 0.6 m wall, 3.6 m tall, 0.8 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Existing-product distinction | Not another dressing gallery, pocket wall, valet datum, pivot wall, or travel packing wall | Series existing-products review | The differentiator focuses on low-glare formal garment storage |
| Buyer use case | Primary suite or dressing corridor with closed storage for delicate formal garments | Commercial intent | Supports made-to-order wardrobe planning |
| Image acceptance | Hero is square on a clean white background; supporting images cover room, detail, and lifestyle views | Shop SKU visual gate | Supports commerce feed and product-page image requirements |
| No manual price | Copy states dimensions only and leaves USD price to formula computation | Commerce mandate | Avoids invented package pricing |
| Lead qualification | Asks which formal garments and keepsake textiles require protected low-glare storage | Sales usefulness | Helps the sales team qualify serious wardrobe inquiries |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
It is made to order and manufactured in Fadior's Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurement, sample approval, and project drawings. The module is not a warehouse-ready wardrobe kit; hanger heights, trousseau bay depth, lighting access, folded textile storage, and finish samples should be confirmed before factory release. This keeps expectations clear before deposit, survey, and technical review.
This SKU focuses on low-glare closed storage for formal garments, keepsake textiles, and delicate folded pieces rather than another dressing gallery, pocket wall, valet datum, pivot wall, or travel packing wall. The differentiator gives Lumiere a quieter planning role: protect special clothing, reduce visual clutter, and keep the dressing area composed while still giving the owner a deliberate bay for occasion pieces.
No. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, finish texture, and measured proportions. Fadior should still confirm physical samples, site dimensions, internal storage drawings, and lighting specification before production, because the public image is a planning reference rather than final proof of the finished wardrobe.
The publisher calculates the USD price from the module-dimension meters supplied in the bundle: base cabinet, wall cabinet, tall cabinet, and countertop lengths. The page avoids manual package pricing because final drawings, finish choices, internal layout, lighting, and measured site conditions can change the specification. That keeps the shop listing transparent without pretending a survey-dependent custom wardrobe is a fixed kit.
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