Surface finishes
- ipê-hardwood closed fronts
- lime-washed clay end panel
- bronze-toned reveal line
- aged terracotta floor pairing
Voyage
A custom Voyage wardrobe module with a bronze-toned packing wall, closed ipê-hardwood fronts, a lime-washed clay end panel, and a durable 304 stainless steel cabinet body for travel-focused dressing rooms.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Voyage Bronze Veil Packing Wall is made to order in our Foshan, China factory, with an approximate 30-day production lead time before shipping coordination. It gives homeowners, architects, and interior designers a closed wardrobe module where seasonal travel packing, hanging storage, folded garments, and a calm dressing route are planned as one measured wall rather than separate cabinets and a loose bench.
The differentiator is the Bronze Veil Packing Wall. Existing Voyage products already cover mirror-lit dressing, tambour trunk docking, cedar-shadow passage, atelier gallery storage, and oak provenance directions. This SKU adds a different behavior: a warm packing ledge set into closed ipê-hardwood fronts, with a bronze-toned reveal and lime-washed clay end panel for a softer courtyard-villa wardrobe mood.
The module is intended for a primary dressing room that needs order before travel. The tall closed fronts conceal hanging and folded storage, the ledge gives a place to stage folded garments or a case before departure, and the end panel lets the wardrobe meet plaster architecture without feeling like a freestanding closet. The result is calmer than open wardrobe shelving and more purposeful than a plain full-height cabinet wall.
A 304 stainless steel cabinet body sits behind the visible finish direction. That concealed basis supports daily cleaning, repeated door use, alignment across tall fronts, and long-term service in humid coastal residences. The visible language stays warm: ipê-hardwood grain, lime-washed clay tone, aged terracotta floor color, restrained bronze-toned reveal, and sunlit courtyard shadows that fit the Voyage series without copying earlier mirror or trunk concepts.
For buyers, the value is practical comparison. The Sanity-backed series is Voyage, the category is Wardrobe, the differentiator is Bronze Veil Packing Wall, and the formula dimensions are listed before the publisher computes price. The image set supports inspection rather than fantasy: the white hero isolates the SKU, the midscene shows circulation, the detail studies finish transitions, and the lifestyle image shows a calm unoccupied packing moment.
Project teams can tune width, door split, internal rail layout, drawer count, plinth height, ledge depth, side-panel return, lighting channel, finish sample, packing sequence, and installation detail after measurement. Before production, confirm floor level, wall straightness, ceiling height, door swing, socket position, access path, ventilation, adjacent bath route, and the clearance needed to open luggage comfortably in front of the wardrobe.
The packing ledge is the practical center of the SKU. It gives the owner a place to fold shirts, compare garments, rest a closed travel case, check outfit groupings, or prepare items for a weekend trip without using the bed or bathroom counter. Because the ledge is integrated into the wardrobe wall, the room still reads as ordered after the packing task is complete.
Closed fronts are important for the Voyage buyer. Open rails can look appealing in a staged image, but many real homes need storage that hides garment bags, seasonal pieces, accessories, shoe boxes, luggage straps, and cleaning supplies. This module keeps those items concealed while the visible surface language carries the warmth of the dressing suite.
The lime-washed clay end panel helps the wardrobe meet architecture more softly. Instead of ending with a hard cabinet side, the module can visually connect with plaster returns, courtyard light, aged floor tones, and a quiet wall plane. That makes the wardrobe feel built into the residence rather than placed into a finished room after the design was complete.
The bronze-toned reveal is restrained rather than decorative. It gives enough shadow and warmth for the tall doors to read clearly, but it does not turn the wardrobe into a hardware display. For a primary suite, that balance matters: the wardrobe needs identity when seen from the doorway, yet it should stay calm during daily dressing routines.
The concealed cabinet body is specified for durability rather than visual show. A 304 stainless steel structure supports cleaning, damp-climate service, and long-term alignment behind the warmer residential finish. This is useful for coastal villas, humid city apartments, and wardrobe-to-bath transitions where timber-only cabinetry can require more maintenance discipline.
For an architect, the module creates a clear planning object. The team can discuss a measured tall cabinet run, a defined packing ledge, a return panel, a finish palette, and a circulation zone instead of starting from a vague wardrobe request. That clarity helps early budgeting, drawing review, finish sampling, and coordination with lighting, flooring, and adjacent bath details.
For an interior designer, the finish direction gives a warmer alternative to mirror-heavy dressing rooms. Ipê hardwood, pale clay, adobe sand, deep olive, and lime-washed wall tones can support a grounded villa atmosphere without relying on dark luxury styling. The product still fits the Voyage family, but it gives the series a travel-preparation story distinct from the existing mirror-lit and trunk-dock SKUs.
For procurement, the formula dimensions make the commercial scope easier to read. Base cabinet planning length, tall cabinet planning length, and packing ledge length are listed as meter inputs, while the publisher computes price from the approved formula. That keeps the page transparent without asking Codex to invent a price or hide how the SKU is structured.
The white hero image is intentionally plain. It lets the module be reviewed as a shop SKU with closed fronts, clean outline, and visible proportions. The richer room images are used for context, not for hiding the product inside atmosphere. Buyers can first inspect the object, then understand how it behaves in a courtyard-side dressing suite.
The midscene image shows the relationship between the wardrobe and circulation. A wardrobe can fail when it leaves too little standing room, blocks a route to the bath, or gives luggage no place to open. This SKU should be planned with enough floor clearance in front of the ledge, a comfortable path to adjacent rooms, and door operation that does not conflict with the room layout.
The detail image is meant to slow the buyer down. It focuses on closed door rhythm, reveal depth, end-panel transition, and the way warmer surfaces meet the packing ledge. Those details matter because wardrobe modules are touched every day. Small alignment problems, weak edges, or visually noisy handles become more noticeable in a dressing room than they might in a distant wall cabinet.
The lifestyle image stays unoccupied so the product remains the subject. A folded textile and closed travel case can suggest use, but people, open doors, and exposed interiors would distract from the shop SKU review. The buyer should understand the storage behavior without mistaking the image for a final site photograph or a promise of exact room contents.
During project review, Fadior can adapt the internal planning for long garments, folded knitwear, shoe storage, accessory trays, seasonal luggage, laundry handoff, or a dressing-to-bath route. The external concept remains Bronze Veil Packing Wall, while the internal configuration responds to the family, the climate, the room width, and the way the owner prepares for daily or seasonal travel.
Before approving production, the project team should verify ceiling height, wall flatness, finished floor tolerance, power access, lighting control, ventilation, installation route, elevator size, door swing, adjacent bath humidity, and the planned position for luggage on the floor. These details are not decorative, but they decide whether a beautiful wardrobe also works comfortably after installation.
The SKU is strongest for buyers who want a warmer, travel-ready wardrobe without visual clutter. It is not meant to replace a full walk-in room with open display shelves, nor is it a mirror-forward dressing wall. It is a measured, closed, made-to-order module for homeowners who want a composed storage wall that supports packing, cleaning, and everyday reset.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The visual direction presents a courtyard-side dressing wall with closed ipê-hardwood fronts, a lime-washed clay return, bronze-toned reveal lines, and a packing ledge that reads as part of the wardrobe instead of loose furniture.
The image sequence moves from clean commerce isolation to real room context, close finish inspection, and a quiet travel-preparation moment, so buyers can judge proportion, finish direction, and daily use without seeing exposed interiors.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Bronze veil packing ledge
A dedicated ledge gives seasonal travel preparation a calm staging surface while keeping the wardrobe face visually closed and ordered.
Closed full-height storage
Tall fronts conceal hanging zones, folded garments, and accessories so the dressing room can reset cleanly after daily use.
Moisture-stable cabinet body
The concealed 304 stainless steel cabinet body supports cleaning, alignment, and long-term service in humid residential settings.
Courtyard-villa finish direction
Ipê-hardwood fronts, lime-washed clay, terracotta tones, and a restrained bronze-toned reveal give Voyage a warmer travel-focused expression.
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 tune door count, hanging zones, drawer mix, ledge depth, finish sample, side-panel return, plinth height, accessory planning, lighting channel, and installation detail after site measurements are reviewed.
Before production, the project team should confirm floor level, wall straightness, ceiling height, door swing, socket position, access path, ventilation, adjacent bath route, and the clearance needed to open luggage comfortably in front of the wardrobe.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Base cabinet planning | 2.2 meters |
|---|---|
| Wall cabinet planning | 0.0 meters |
| Tall cabinet planning | 3.6 meters |
| Countertop or packing ledge planning | 1.4 meters |
| Primary cabinet material | 304 stainless steel |
| Visible finish direction | Ipê-hardwood closed fronts, lime-washed clay end panel, bronze-toned reveal line, aged terracotta floor pairing, and deep olive accent tone |
Quick facts
Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.
| Claim | Value | Standard | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made to order | Manufactured to order in Foshan, China with an approximate 30-day production lead time | Production disclosure | Stated in the first product paragraph for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering for proportion, finish direction, and residential wardrobe atmosphere. | Image transparency | Final manufactured product may vary with site measurements, finish samples, lighting, accessory choices, and installation conditions. |
| Series binding | Voyage | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live catalog selection, not manual invention |
| Category binding | Wardrobe | Sanity catalog | Selected through the shared daily category plan |
| Differentiator | Bronze Veil Packing Wall | Slug contract | Distinct from existing Voyage mirror, trunk, cedar, atelier, and oak concepts |
| Base planning length | 2.2 meters | Formula dimension input | Used by the publisher for formula pricing |
| Tall planning length | 3.6 meters | Formula dimension input | Represents full-height closed wardrobe storage |
| Packing ledge length | 1.4 meters | Formula dimension input | Represents the staging surface within the wardrobe wall |
| Cabinet body material | 304 stainless steel | Fadior product rule | Concealed structural cabinet body behind the visible finish direction |
| Hero image role | White-background commerce hero | Shop SKU image plan | Supports Google Merchant Center review and PDP inspection |
| Aspect ratio coverage | 1:1, 4:3, and 16:9 images included | Shop SKU image plan | Covers hero, midscene, detail, and lifestyle page placements |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
Lead time is approximately 30 days from order confirmation because each module is manufactured to order in Fadior’s Foshan, China factory. Before production, the project team confirms measurements, finish samples, internal storage layout, door split, ledge depth, and delivery access. The final wardrobe is then packed for coordinated shipping and installation planning. This schedule keeps sizing, finish review, and packing preparation aligned before the module leaves the factory.
This SKU focuses on a travel-preparation wall with a dedicated packing ledge, warm reveal line, closed ipê-hardwood fronts, and a lime-washed clay end panel. Other Voyage products already address mirror-lit dressing, tambour trunk docking, cedar-shadow passages, atelier gallery storage, and oak provenance walls, so this module gives buyers a distinct closed wardrobe direction for organized seasonal packing. The result is a warmer travel-preparation wall, not another mirror-forward or trunk-focused Voyage variant.
Yes. Fadior uses this shop SKU as the priced module direction, then reviews project measurements before final production drawings. Door splits, hanging rails, drawer locations, ledge depth, lighting channel, accessory trays, plinth height, side-panel return, finish samples, and installation sequence can be adjusted to suit the dressing room and the owner’s storage habits. This keeps the published SKU consistent while still allowing the final storage plan to match the household.
Bronze Veil Packing Wall works best in a primary dressing room, villa wardrobe passage, apartment suite, or wardrobe-to-bath transition where closed storage and a luggage preparation surface matter. It is strongest when the room needs visual calm, moisture-ready construction, and enough open floor clearance for packing without turning the dressing area into an exposed closet. The design is especially useful when the owner wants order, warmth, and practical packing support in one wall.
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