Surface finishes
- Smoked oak wardrobe fronts
- Velvety lime-plaster side plane
- Aged bronze reveal detail
Onyx
A made-to-order Onyx wardrobe module for a quiet dressing passage with closed smoked-oak rhythm and shadowed privacy.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Onyx Wardrobe Suite with Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for owners planning a private villa dressing passage, bedroom approach, or calm wardrobe wall. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, panel rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, finish sample approval, lighting review, and project drawings.
The Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister gives the Onyx series a direction that is separate from its existing valet walls, packing walls, ribbon wardrobes, linen glass bridges, mirror galleries, watch passages, and wool valet corners. This SKU is about privacy and procession: the wardrobe reads as a closed architectural passage rather than a display cabinet, walk-in boutique, or furniture wall.
The buyer problem is familiar in large homes. Bedrooms often need a transition between sleeping, dressing, bath access, luggage handling, and daily outfit preparation. If the wardrobe is too open, it feels busy from the bedroom. If it is too plain, the dressing approach looks like a corridor with storage added later. This module uses closed fronts, shadowed vertical rhythm, and a cloister-like wall composition to make the route feel intentional.
For designers, the first decision is how the wardrobe meets the room sequence. The cabinet wall should align with doorways, bed sightlines, bathroom access, ceiling lights, and the path used when carrying luggage or garments. A cloister composition works best when the repeated panels create calm movement while still leaving enough clearance for two people to pass, pause, and use the wardrobe comfortably.
The module dimensions are 2.2 meters of base cabinet planning, 3.6 meters of wall cabinet planning, 5.4 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 0.4 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 direction is quiet and dark without becoming heavy. Smoked oak gives the suite a warmer base than a plain black wardrobe wall. Velvety lime-plaster side planes soften the edges, while aged bronze reveal lines add just enough definition for a premium dressing corridor. The result should feel private, tactile, and residential instead of retail-like or theatrical.
This wardrobe module should be planned with lighting restraint. Strong spotlights can make dark panels look uneven, and overly bright cove lighting can turn a private dressing passage into a display aisle. Fadior should confirm ceiling positions, wall-washer spacing, mirror glare, bedside sightlines, and evening use before the drawings are released to production.
The image set keeps the product exterior-facing. Doors and drawers remain closed, internal fittings are not exposed, and the product is shown as a finished wardrobe wall rather than a reveal of hidden mechanisms. That matters because this SKU sells a made-to-order planning idea: privacy, rhythm, measured access, and a calm transition between bedroom functions.
Related Onyx pages help clarify the difference. A brass finish valet wall is more about service detail. A packing wall focuses on travel preparation. A smoked mirror valet gallery creates a reflective dressing moment. Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister is different because the passage itself becomes the design subject, with closed cabinetry shaping a quiet route through the private suite.
International buyers should send wall length, ceiling height, bedroom photos, bathroom door positions, preferred hanging volume, suitcase storage needs, floor material, lighting plan, and any privacy concerns before the first design call. These inputs let Fadior judge whether the cloakroom sequence should run as one long wall, turn a corner, include a bench, or stop before a doorway.
The strongest version avoids over-decoration. The cloister should feel calm when all panels are closed and useful when the household is busy. It should not depend on visible clothing, display shelves, or dramatic lighting to make sense. The visual value comes from proportion, material depth, shadow, and the way the wardrobe wall guides movement.
Before production, Fadior should confirm site dimensions, wall structure, floor level, ceiling condition, panel finish samples, reveal color, handle-reveal position, delivery access, installation sequence, and final drawings. That practical review keeps the published design rendering aligned with a buildable made-to-order wardrobe module.
Ventilation and daily access should be discussed early. A closed wardrobe passage can look clean but still needs thoughtful internal planning after measurement. Buyers should decide which zones need long hanging, folded storage, shoe storage, suitcase space, seasonal rotation, accessory drawers, and laundry staging so the final cabinet layout supports actual use.
The corridor width matters as much as the cabinet length. In a private suite, one person may be dressing while another crosses toward the bathroom or bed. Fadior should check walking clearance, door swing conflicts, mirror placement, bench projection, corner protection, and whether the wardrobe run should include a recessed pause point instead of a continuous flat wall.
Material samples matter because smoked oak, warm putty wall color, dark reveal lines, and aged bronze accents can shift under different lighting. A sample board should be reviewed beside the actual flooring and wall finish, not only under showroom light. That review helps the buyer choose whether the corridor should feel warmer, darker, softer, or more architectural.
This SKU can support a hotel-suite level of order without becoming commercial. A private villa may need a route where daily clothing, eveningwear, luggage, and accessories stay organized while the bedroom remains visually quiet. The cloister composition gives that routine a clear boundary and keeps the wardrobe surface refined when viewed from the sleeping area.
Installation planning should include delivery path, panel sequence, site protection, and final adjustment time. Long dark wardrobe walls reveal alignment issues quickly, especially where plinths, vertical reveals, and ceiling shadows meet. If the wall is not straight, the design may need scribing, adjusted reveal depth, or revised panel rhythm before factory release.
The buyer should treat the published module as a precise starting point. It defines a wardrobe passage, panel 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, ventilation needs, and a clear storage plan for daily use.
The sales handoff should stay practical and visual. A buyer can send photos from both ends of the passage, a short video walking from bedroom to bath, approximate hanging volume, luggage size, preferred mirror locations, and the floor material. Those details help Fadior decide whether the cloister should run full height, step around a beam, include a bench, or meet another cabinet module.
Maintenance planning should also be part of the first conversation. Dark wardrobe surfaces can show dust, fabric fibers, luggage rub marks, and uneven cleaning patterns faster than lighter finishes. Fadior should discuss wipe-down access, reachable upper panels, plinth protection, and whether the household wants a lower scuff zone or removable protection near suitcase storage.
Final acceptance should check standing sightlines, door alignment, reveal consistency, lighting temperature, walking clearance, panel finish, plinth detail, storage plan, and whether the wardrobe still feels calm when the private suite is in everyday use. A final cleaning plan should be agreed before release.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The image set presents the Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister as a closed exterior wardrobe wall, with repeated dark panels, translucent shadowed texture, and a measured plinth line visible from both room and close-detail views.
The visual direction keeps the product private and architectural, so buyers can judge passage scale, panel rhythm, finish depth, and lighting discipline without seeing internal hardware or speculative storage fittings.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Cloister-style wardrobe passage
Closed wardrobe panels organize the route between bedroom, bath, and dressing functions without turning storage into display.
Smoked-oak visual warmth
The dark wood direction keeps the Onyx series private and warm while preserving a restrained architectural surface.
Aged bronze reveal detail
Subtle reveal lines define access points and panel rhythm without adding exposed handles or visual clutter.
Exterior-only presentation
The module is shown as a finished closed wardrobe system, with final internal planning reserved for drawings.
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.
Fadior can adjust passage length, panel rhythm, hanging zones, drawer locations, lighting coordination, mirror placement, plinth height, and finish samples after site measurement. Buyers should confirm walking clearance, privacy goals, storage volume, ventilation needs, and delivery access before drawings move to production.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Onyx |
|---|---|
| Category | Wardrobe |
| Differentiator | Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister |
| Production model | Made to order in Foshan, China |
| Production lead time | Approximately 30 days after approved drawings |
| Pricing basis | Formula uses base, wall, tall, and countertop meter inputs |
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 first description paragraph |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery shown is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in customer-facing copy and FAQ |
| Series binding | Onyx | Sanity catalog | Series comes from live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Wardrobe | Shared daily plan | First planned category for the 2026-07-18 shopnew schedule |
| Differentiator | Smoked Oak Wardrobe Cloister | Slug contract | Title, slug, and content use the same differentiator |
| Slug | onyx-smoked-oak-wardrobe-cloister-in-onyx | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Module dimensions | 2.2 m base, 3.6 m wall, 5.4 m tall, 0.4 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Existing-product distinction | Not a valet wall, packing wall, champagne ribbon, linen glass bridge, smoked mirror gallery, oak watch passage, or wool valet corner | Series existing-products review | Focuses on a cloister-like dressing corridor with closed smoked-oak rhythm |
| Buyer use case | Private villa dressing passage between bedroom, bath, and luggage storage | Commercial intent | Supports made-to-order planning |
| Image acceptance | Four approved generated product images across 1:1, 4:3, and 16:9 roles | Shop image set | Built from accepted product image outputs |
| Lighting planning | Dark wardrobe passages need restrained lighting and glare review | Buyer decision support | Unique to closed cloister-style wardrobe use |
| Related-page distinction | Different from Onyx valet, packing, mirror, watch, and wool corner pages | Internal linking intent | Prevents duplicate product angle |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
No. This SKU is a made-to-order planning module for a private wardrobe passage, not a ready-made cabinet set. Fadior uses the published concept to begin the buyer conversation, then confirms site dimensions, ceiling condition, storage needs, lighting positions, finish samples, delivery access, installation sequence, and final drawings before the Foshan factory production process begins. with a clear scope. before deposit.
It works best between a bedroom, bath, luggage zone, and dressing area where the owner wants storage to feel private and architectural. The product is less about visible display and more about creating a calm route, closed cabinet rhythm, and quiet panel surface that keeps daily clothing routines from visually overwhelming the private suite. during morning and evening use. every day.
Buyers should confirm wall length, ceiling height, walking clearance, bathroom door swings, hanging volume, shoe storage, luggage storage, mirror placement, lighting temperature, finish samples, ventilation needs, and delivery access. These details affect panel rhythm, internal planning, reveal depth, plinth height, and whether the finished wardrobe passage feels calm during daily residential use. after installation. across seasons, guests, and housekeeping routines.
The images are a design rendering that shows material mood, panel 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 dark wardrobe passages are judged by alignment, shadow, finish depth, and walking clearance., and daily visibility. under daylight and evening lighting conditions.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.