Surface finishes
- warm cypress rail rhythm
- pale rice-paper style inset panels
- unglazed clay-plaster side mass
- brushed travertine dressing island cue
- charred wood shadow trim
Voyage
A Voyage wardrobe module with a closed garment-care alcove, warm cypress rhythm, pale inset fronts, and a calm courtyard-facing dressing presence.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Steam Garment Alcove is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for residences that need closed wardrobe storage, daily outfit staging, and a quieter garment-care prep zone in one shop SKU. The module combines full-height Voyage wardrobe fronts, warm cypress rails, pale inset panels, an unglazed clay-plaster return, and a dedicated closed alcove for refreshing garments before they move back into the wardrobe sequence.
The differentiator is the Steam Garment Alcove itself. Existing Voyage products already cover atelier gallery spines, bronze veil packing walls, cedar dressing passages, copenhagen pocket walls, oak provenance walls, valet island alcoves, mirror-lit dressing runs, pearl ribbed bays, recessed watch niches, saddle glass tie porticos, trunk dock walls, and harbor bench armoires. This SKU is different because it centers a closed garment-care preparation bay rather than another tie display, packing station, luggage dock, watch niche, or valet island.
The commercial purpose is practical: give the owner a discreet place to stage tomorrow clothing, recover light travel creases, hang a jacket before a meeting, and return refreshed pieces without turning the dressing room into an exposed utility area. When the wardrobe is closed, the wall reads as one calm architectural surface instead of a set of visible service functions.
For designers, the product converts a loose request for a refined wardrobe with garment care into a scope that can be drawn, quoted, shipped, and installed. The brief can specify Voyage, Wardrobe, Steam Garment Alcove, closed fronts, raw-cypress rhythm, pale inset panels, clay-plaster return, and formula dimensions, giving the homeowner, designer, factory team, and installer one shared object to review.
The visual direction borrows from a calm courtyard-facing dressing suite. Warm cypress gives the wall depth, pale inset panels soften the tall fronts, the clay-plaster return keeps the alcove architectural, and the dressing island supports a quiet outfit staging sequence. The result suits primary suites where clothing care should feel ordered rather than mechanical.
Fadior specifies the cabinet body around 304 stainless steel construction, then resolves exterior finish, alcove width, hanging clearance, ventilation route, lighting path, panel rhythm, wall fixing, delivery segmentation, and site tolerances through project drawings. The public concept is rice-paper beige, natural cypress, charred wood depth, raw clay plaster, and soft mochi warmth, but exact proportions are confirmed by measurement and sample approval.
The garment alcove should be reviewed around real morning and travel habits, not only elevation balance. The owner should be able to remove a jacket from luggage, hang it for a short refresh, choose accessories, check a mirror sightline, and return the garment without blocking the bed, bench, island, courtyard door, or dressing corridor. That sequence protects both function and calm.
This SKU works well in a villa primary suite with a courtyard view, a city apartment dressing corridor, or a guest wardrobe where travel clothing often needs short-term handling. In each case, the utility stays behind a closed architectural face, while the named alcove gives garment care a destination that does not create visual noise.
Finish approval matters because the palette is quiet. Cypress grain should stay refined, pale inset panels should avoid busy pattern, the clay-plaster return should align with adjacent wall planes, and any lighting route should support garment review without making the wardrobe feel like a service closet. Samples should be checked under the room actual lighting before production.
The formula inputs are transparent: 1.4 meters of base cabinet planning, 0.2 meters of wall cabinet planning, 5.1 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 1.0 meter of countertop planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values. This copy does not invent a price, discount, package total, or promotion.
Before production, Fadior reviews wall straightness, ceiling height, floor level, skirting conditions, socket positions, door swings, mirror placement, lighting channels, garment clearance, delivery access, and elevator or stair limits. If the wardrobe must be split for transport, the visible panel rhythm should absorb those breaks so the final wall still feels continuous.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, site proportions, surface texture, color calibration, reveal depth, and installation conditions after measurement and sample approval. Buyers should treat the page as a clear commercial starting point, then lock the final configuration through drawings and finish samples.
The cabinet-body decision is separate from the visible mood. Fadior uses 304 stainless steel as the construction basis for durability and alignment, while the exterior can carry raw cypress, pale inset panels, and clay-plaster tone that suit the residence. This separation lets buyers pursue a softer dressing-room surface without giving up structural discipline.
For procurement teams, the named SKU makes scope comparison cleaner. Instead of asking for a general custom wardrobe with garment care, the request can refer to a Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Steam Garment Alcove, including closed storage, refresh alcove, formula dimensions, made-to-order status, and merchant-feed object in one place.
The final review should rehearse daily use in order: opening clearance, garment hanging height, steaming or refresh equipment placement where specified by the project team, island spacing, lighting comfort, mirror sightline, return route, and cleaning access. This keeps the product elegant while confirming the owner can use the alcove naturally every day.
Because the garment-care area is closed, the room can support practical clothing routines without the dust and visual distraction of exposed rails. This matters for international buyers who want a quiet primary suite, fast outfit preparation, and surfaces that remain composed when the room is viewed from the bed or corridor.
The island relationship should be coordinated before production. If a dressing island sits opposite the wardrobe, its depth and drawer direction need to support quick garment return without crowding the walkway. If the mirror is near the alcove, the closed preparation bay should sit in the sightline so the owner can move from wardrobe selection to garment review naturally.
For project teams, this SKU also creates a better conversation about cost and logistics. The meter inputs define the commerce object, while the named differentiator defines the design intent. That separation helps designers revise finish samples and internal organization without losing the procurement identity of the product page, quotation, packing plan, and installation checklist.
Cleaning and long-term care should stay part of the early review. Cypress rails, pale inset panels, clay-plaster edges, and garment-adjacent handling zones can remain refined when contact points are placed carefully and textile-adjacent details are protected from heavy abrasion. Fadior reviews these points before manufacturing so the finished wardrobe remains useful after the first impression.
The shop page is therefore a practical decision record as much as a visual concept. It names the series, category, differentiator, dimensions, production posture, rendering disclosure, and buyer-use case in one place, giving homeowners and project teams a stable reference before they request a final measured quotation.
The result is a shop-ready wardrobe object for buyers who want garment refresh planning without a loud utility feature. Voyage provides the catalog series, the Steam Garment Alcove names the distinct design move, and the closed exterior keeps the daily dressing zone calm enough for repeated use.
During quotation review, keep the alcove, adjacent wardrobe fronts, island clearance, lighting path, ventilation expectation, and delivery split visible in one drawing set so the final object stays practical as well as calm.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The visual language keeps the wardrobe closed and architectural, using warm cypress rails, pale inset panels, and clay-plaster mass to create a quiet garment-care sequence.
The courtyard-facing mood supports the product rather than replacing it: filtered lattice light, restrained styling, and calm proportions help the steam garment alcove remain the focal point.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Closed garment prep
The named alcove gives light garment refresh, next-day outfit staging, and travel clothing return a clear destination while keeping the wardrobe face composed.
Courtyard-soft finish direction
Warm cypress, pale inset fronts, clay-plaster return, and restrained stone cues create a calm Japanese-influenced dressing mood.
Project-ready scope
Series, category, differentiator, dimensions, production posture, and disclosures are written as one reviewable commerce object.
Durable cabinet basis
Fadior resolves the exterior around a 304 stainless steel cabinet body after measurement, samples, and site checks.
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 alcove width, garment hanging height, drawer depth, lighting route, ventilation expectation, panel rhythm, and side return dimensions after site measurement and sample approval.
Project teams should confirm ceiling height, wall straightness, door swings, island clearance, mirror sightlines, delivery segmentation, and finish samples before production.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Voyage |
|---|---|
| Category | Wardrobe |
| Differentiator | Steam Garment Alcove |
| Module dimensions | 1.4 m base, 0.2 m wall, 5.1 m tall, 1.0 m countertop |
| Production posture | Made to order in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time |
| Imagery posture | Design rendering for material mood and spatial intent |
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 and FAQ for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in product copy and FAQ for buyer transparency |
| Series binding | Voyage | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Wardrobe | Sanity catalog | Category comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Differentiator | Steam Garment Alcove | Slug contract | Title, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | voyage-steam-garment-alcove-in-voyage | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Construction basis | 304 stainless steel cabinet body | Fadior product standard | Exterior finish is project-specific |
| Module dimensions | 1.4 m base, 0.2 m wall, 5.1 m tall, 1.0 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Garment-care scope | Closed garment refresh, hanging prep, travel crease recovery, and daily outfit staging bay | Buyer intent | Differentiates this SKU from tie portico, trunk dock, watch niche, valet island, and packing-wall products |
| Visual direction | Tokyo Wabi Kitchen for Wardrobe | Image style rotation | Uses compatible style and category overlay for all four image briefs |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
It focuses on a closed garment-care prep bay for light refresh, outfit staging, and travel clothing return, with warm cypress rails, pale inset panels, and a clay-plaster return. Existing Voyage products cover tie planning, packing walls, watch niches, valet islands, pocket walls, trunk docks, and bench armoires; this SKU gives clothing care a quieter architectural destination that remains composed when viewed from the bed, corridor, or dressing island.
Yes. Voyage Wardrobe Suite with Steam Garment Alcove is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after final drawings, measurements, finish samples, and project details are approved. The lead time disclosure is part of the shop SKU so buyers understand that the page is a commerce starting point, not an in-stock packaged cabinet.
Use the page as a shared scope reference for Voyage, Wardrobe, Steam Garment Alcove, closed fronts, formula dimensions, garment-care planning, and the intended finish mood. Final production should still be locked through measured drawings, sample review, delivery planning, installation checks, and daily-use rehearsal around garment hanging height, island clearance, lighting comfort, ventilation expectation, mirror sightline, and cleaning access. Confirm these points early.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent. Final manufactured product may vary in lighting, room proportions, surface texture, color calibration, reveal depth, and installation conditions after measurement and sample approval, so buyers should use the images to align direction while relying on drawings and finish samples for the final order before payment and production.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.