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Voyage

Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Mirror Lit Dressing Run

A made-to-order Voyage wardrobe module with a 304 stainless steel cabinet body, walnut-boiserie exterior, mirrored dressing rhythm, polished brass reveal, and marble plinth planning.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Voyage
Space
Wardrobe
Specifications
6

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Fadior Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Mirror Lit Dressing Run — 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.

Voyage Mirror Lit Dressing Run is a made-to-order wardrobe module for private dressing corridors that need the precision of a modular system with the fit, finish, and coordination expected from bespoke cabinetry. The module combines 3.2 meters of base planning, 4.8 meters of tall wardrobe planning, and 1.0 meter of dressing ledge scope. Its visible language uses walnut boiserie, mirrored vertical bands, polished brass reveal lines, and a book-matched marble plinth over a 304 stainless steel cabinet body.

The differentiator is deliberately separate from the existing Voyage products. Atelier Gallery Spine focuses on a gallery-like planning line, Tailored Dressing Gallery Wardrobe uses a broader dressing-gallery story, and the older Voyage Wardrobe Suite is a general family entry. Mirror Lit Dressing Run narrows the product to a specific daily ritual: a full-height wardrobe wall where mirrored strips, reveal rhythm, and a ledge zone support dressing, garment review, and valet preparation before the day begins.

This product also fits today's editorial brief about modular luxury. Many buyers hear modular and assume compromise, while they hear bespoke and assume precision. This SKU shows the more useful middle ground: measured module lengths, repeatable full-overlay planning, and clean vertical rhythm, then made-to-order adjustment after site measurement. That lets the wardrobe read as tailored architecture without forcing every decision into a slow one-off millwork process.

The 304 stainless steel cabinet body is the practical basis. Wardrobes carry daily hand contact, seasonal humidity, luggage impact, garment weight, cleaning routines, and alignment stress. A stainless cabinet structure helps the finished fronts stay stable behind the walnut and mirrored exterior. The visible side stays residential and warm: walnut gives depth, polished brass defines the vertical reveal, mirrored bands support dressing use, and the marble plinth grounds the run at floor level.

The layout is built around a corridor-length dressing wall rather than a walk-in closet display. The 4.8 meters of tall planning creates the main storage elevation. The 3.2 meters of base planning gives the lower run and plinth a measurable scope. The 1.0 meter dressing ledge creates a practical preparation surface for watches, folded garments, trays, fragrance, or travel items. Fadior can adjust those lengths after measurement, but the shop SKU keeps the early scope clear.

For designers, the module helps connect storage, reflection, light, and circulation in one decision. A wardrobe is often specified as doors first and lighting later. Here the mirror-lit rhythm is part of the product identity from the start. The vertical mirrored bands give a checking point without turning the whole elevation into a mirror wall. Brass reveals make the door breaks legible. Walnut keeps the elevation warm enough for bedrooms, dressing corridors, serviced residences, and private apartment suites.

For homeowners, the value is easy to understand. The wardrobe should make the morning routine calmer, not only hold clothing. Closed fronts keep the room quiet, mirrored bands support outfit checks, the dressing ledge gives a place to set small items, and the plinth makes the wall feel built in. The module can suit a master bedroom approach, a private closet corridor, a city apartment dressing wall, or a guest-suite preparation zone.

The product is made to order, so the page defines the starting module rather than freezing every site detail. Before production, Fadior can review wall length, ceiling height, wardrobe depth, door segmentation, mirrored band width, reveal finish, plinth height, ledge depth, drawer or hanging distribution, internal accessory needs, power planning, packing sequence, freight route, and local installation tolerance. The finished order can then match the actual room while staying inside a clear product boundary.

Procurement teams get a measurable SKU rather than a mood-board request. The dimensions identify which parts drive the formula price: base run, tall wardrobe elevation, and dressing ledge. The taxonomy places the item under wardrobe modules, and the merchant category maps to armoires and wardrobes. Availability remains preorder because the module is manufactured to order, normally about 30 days before shipping coordination after drawings and samples are confirmed.

The image set supports both inspection and desire. The square hero isolates the complete closed wardrobe on a white background for commerce review. The midscene view shows corridor proportion, mirrored rhythm, and how the wardrobe sits in a Milan-style residential room. The detail image lets a buyer inspect walnut grain, brass reveal, mirror edge, and marble plinth. The lifestyle view shows the wardrobe as part of a quiet dressing suite without turning the room into a showroom.

The mirror-lit idea stays restrained. Instead of visible spectacle, the product uses vertical reflected bands and ordered reveal spacing to make preparation easier. Buyers can check proportion, garment color, and final appearance while the storage remains closed. That matters in private homes where a dressing area should feel calm, not theatrical. It also helps the room photograph well for designers, because the wardrobe reads as architecture rather than loose furniture.

The modular luxury argument is practical for international projects. A project team can begin with a defined wardrobe module, discuss the base run and tall elevation, then refine site details after measurement. That order avoids a common early-stage problem: asking buyers to approve an entirely abstract custom wall before they understand the scope. Voyage gives the conversation a product boundary first, then lets Fadior adapt it to the actual room.

The dressing ledge is small but useful. It can support a tray, folded shirt, watch, cufflinks, scarf, fragrance bottle, or travel pouch during a morning routine. Because it is part of the same SKU, the ledge can align with the mirrored bands, plinth, and door rhythm instead of being added later as a loose shelf. This keeps the wardrobe wall coherent and easier to review in drawings.

The Voyage series also suits projects where the wardrobe needs to connect with adjacent living spaces. The walnut tone can coordinate with wall panels, interior doors, dressing benches, study millwork, or bedroom storage. Brass reveal lines add definition without making the room feel ornate. The marble plinth gives a durable lower edge where shoes, bags, vacuum cleaning, and daily movement can mark weaker finishes.

For remote buyers, the page makes comparison simpler. They can see the product category, dimensions, finish palette, image roles, production model, and customization path in one place. That reduces the gap between an inspiration image and a real order. It also gives Fadior's team a clearer starting point for drawings, samples, packaging, and shipping coordination.

The final specification can stay quiet or become more formal depending on the residence. A penthouse dressing corridor may use longer mirrored bands and a darker plinth, while a villa suite may keep warmer walnut and softer reflected light. Because the module is priced from measured lengths, those aesthetic choices can be discussed without losing the practical structure of the order.

This SKU should appeal to buyers who want a wardrobe that feels composed, durable, and easy to specify internationally. It does not rely on a generic luxury label. It defines the product by measurable lengths, a clear differentiator, a series family, visible finish decisions, and a made-to-order production path. That gives homeowners a confident product choice, designers a cleaner specification conversation, and project teams a practical starting point for a premium wardrobe order.

Fadior Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Mirror Lit Dressing Run — 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 visual direction presents a closed walnut wardrobe run with mirror bands, brass reveals, and a marble plinth so buyers can judge it as a finished dressing corridor product.

The white-background hero supports feed inspection, while the room images show how the same module works as a calm private preparation wall.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Mirror-lit dressing rhythm

    Mirrored vertical bands and restrained light cues support daily garment review without turning the full wardrobe into a reflective wall.

  • 304 stainless cabinet body

    The wardrobe uses a 304 stainless steel cabinet body to support long-term stability, moisture resistance, and repeatable alignment behind the finished fronts.

  • Walnut and brass reveal

    Walnut boiserie fronts pair with polished brass reveal lines so the closed elevation feels warm, ordered, and easy to read.

  • Made-to-order fit

    Fadior can adjust wall length, ceiling height, door segmentation, mirror width, plinth height, ledge depth, internal accessories, and packing logic before production.

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

  • Walnut boiserie exterior fronts
  • Polished brass reveal lines
  • Book-matched marble plinth
  • Mirrored vertical dressing bands
  • 304 stainless steel cabinet body

Color options

Chamois#E9E2D2
Lacquer Black#1A1A1A
Walnut Burl#7B5C3A
Raw Silk Khaki#9C8A6B
Parchment#D5CDB8
Fadior Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Mirror Lit Dressing Run — 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 Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Mirror Lit Dressing Run — lifestyle setting with natural light and residential styling
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.

Designers may adjust wardrobe depth, door segmentation, mirror-band width, plinth height, ledge depth, reveal finish, drawer and hanging layout, accessory planning, lighting coordination, and packing sequence before Fadior confirms production drawings.

The Mirror Lit Dressing Run can become a master-suite corridor, city apartment dressing wall, or serviced-residence wardrobe while preserving the Voyage series construction basis and Milan-inspired walnut finish direction.

Specifications

Technical specifications

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

Base planning allowance3.2 meters
Wall cabinet planning length0.0 meters
Tall wardrobe planning length4.8 meters
Dressing ledge planning length1.0 meter
Primary cabinet material304 stainless steel
Production modelMade to order, normally about 30 days before shipping coordination

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
Voyage Mirror Lit Dressing Run is a made-to-order wardrobe module.Wardrobe moduleProduct scopeDefines the shop category and product family.
The product uses the Mirror Lit Dressing Run differentiator.Mirror Lit Dressing RunDifferentiatorSeparates this SKU from existing Voyage products.
The module includes 3.2 meters of base planning.3.2 mModule dimensionUsed by the publisher to compute formula price.
The module includes no wall cabinet planning scope.0.0 mModule dimensionKeeps the product correctly classified as a wardrobe module.
The module includes 4.8 meters of tall wardrobe planning.4.8 mModule dimensionDefines the main full-height product elevation.
The module includes 1.0 meter of dressing ledge planning.1.0 mModule dimensionSupports valet preparation and accessory placement.
The cabinet body is specified around 304 stainless steel.304 stainless steelConstruction basisSupports durability behind the finished wardrobe fronts.
The visible finish story combines walnut boiserie, polished brass reveals, mirrored bands, and a book-matched marble plinth.Milan rationalist wardrobe paletteFinish directionGuides buyer expectation and image review.
The product is intended for private dressing corridors and master-suite wardrobe walls.Dressing corridor wardrobeFunctional intentExplains the use case for homeowners and designers.
Normal production timing is about 30 days before shipping coordination.PreorderAvailability modelMatches the shop SKU made-to-order workflow.
The product demonstrates modular luxury through measured modules and made-to-order adjustment.Modular luxuryEditorial briefHonors today's product brief about frameless modular systems as a bespoke alternative.
The hero image is a square white-background commerce view.1:1 heroImage roleSupports product inspection and feed readiness.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

What makes Mirror Lit Dressing Run different from other Voyage wardrobe products?+

This SKU focuses on a corridor-length wardrobe wall with mirrored vertical bands, a dressing ledge, polished brass reveals, and a marble plinth. Existing Voyage products lean toward a gallery spine or broader wardrobe family story. Mirror Lit Dressing Run is more specific: it is designed around the daily preparation moment, where closed storage, reflection, light, and a small landing surface need to work together.

Can the mirror width, ledge depth, and internal wardrobe layout be changed?+

Yes. Fadior manufactures the module to order after drawing confirmation, so mirror-band width, ledge depth, wardrobe height, door segmentation, plinth height, hanging zones, drawers, accessory inserts, lighting coordination, finish sample, packing sequence, and installation tolerance can be adjusted for the room. The shop SKU defines a clear starting scope while leaving final site details flexible. It also gives the design team a cleaner way to coordinate reflection, storage, ledge use, and wall proportion before the order moves into production.

Why use a 304 stainless steel cabinet body inside a wardrobe module?+

Wardrobes face daily opening force, humidity changes, garment weight, luggage impact, cleaning routines, and long-term alignment demands. A 304 stainless steel cabinet body gives the finished walnut and mirror exterior a stable basis behind the visible fronts. The product can keep its warm residential appearance while gaining a durable structure that supports repeatable fit over time. This is especially useful in dressing corridors, where long door lines need to stay straight and quiet after years of daily use.

How does this wardrobe support a modular luxury project?+

The product starts from measurable module lengths, full-height planning, and repeatable door rhythm, then moves through made-to-order adjustment after site review. That gives designers a clear early scope while preserving the fit and finish expected from a premium private dressing space. The buyer gets a defined shop SKU, and the project team still has room to confirm samples, proportions, accessories, and installation details before production.

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