Wardrobes & Dressing Rooms

Wardrobes and dressing rooms have a quiet influence on everyday life. They shape how easily mornings begin, how quickly evenings can be reset, and how calm a bedroom feels once everything is put away. At Make Bespoke Studio we design and deliver bespoke wardrobe and dressing-room joinery for high-end homes, apartments and hospitality projects.

How wardrobes and dressing rooms shape daily routine

A good wardrobe doesn’t just offer more hanging space; it makes decisions feel easier. The right internal layout, lighting and mirrors make it obvious where things live, and encourage clients to keep spaces tidy without much effort.

·        helping clients see what they own at a glance – from everyday pieces to occasion wear

·        separating long, short and seasonal hanging in a way that actually matches how they dress

·        balancing open, closed and partially glazed storage so that the room still feels calm

·        making circulation in dressing rooms generous enough for more than one person to use them comfortably

Wardrobes in private residences

In private homes, wardrobes and dressing rooms often form the backbone of bedroom storage. We design joinery that supports how people really live, while respecting the architecture and wider interior language.

·        Master dressing rooms – Walk-in or walk-through spaces that often sit between bedroom and bathroom. We plan hanging, folded storage, shoe and bag display, jewellery and accessories so everything has a home.

·        Integrated wardrobes in bedrooms – Full-height wardrobes built into bedroom walls or niches, with considered door rhythms and head details that feel calm from the bed.

·        Children’s and teen rooms – Joinery that can adapt over time – generous hanging and folding storage now, with flexibility to introduce desks or additional shelving later.

·        Guest wardrobes and occasional-use rooms – Simpler layouts prioritising hanging, luggage space and a few well-placed shelves, often integrated with headboards or window seats.

These schemes typically sit within wider Residential Joinery packages and often overlap with Headboards & Bedroom Feature Joinery, Fitted Storage & Alcove Units and, where studies share space with bedrooms, Home Offices & Study Joinery.

Dressing rooms and wardrobes in hospitality

In hotels and hospitality projects, wardrobe joinery has to serve guests who arrive with very different habits – overnight stays, extended business trips, families on holiday – while remaining easy to clean and maintain.

·        Hotel guestroom wardrobes and luggage benches – Elevations that combine hanging, shelving, safes and luggage benches in one clear arrangement, often with open or partially open sections for ease of use.

·        Suites and apartment-style dressing rooms – More generous walk-in or walk-through spaces for longer stays, often with distinct his-and-hers zones, dressing tables and integrated mirrors.

·        Back-of-house and staff changing – Robust wardrobe and locker joinery for staff areas, spas and wellness zones, coordinated under broader lockers and changing-room scopes.

Front-of-house wardrobe joinery usually forms part of Hotel Guestroom Joinery within our wider Hospitality Joinery offer, while staff facilities and spa changing are tied into Locker Rooms & Back-of-House Joinery and Spa & Wellness Joinery.

Internal layouts and organisation

The internal configuration is where wardrobe joinery really becomes personal. We plan layouts around how clients dress, travel and store things, rather than applying a fixed template.

·        short, medium and long hanging – including specific bays for dresses, coats and suits

·        folded storage on shelves or within drawers for knitwear, T-shirts and smaller items

·        shoe storage using angled shelves, pull-out trays or concealed cupboards depending on collection size

·        accessories zones – jewellery, watches, ties, belts, bags – with appropriate security and lining

·        integrated safes, laundry baskets and luggage storage that are easy to use but visually calm

For many projects we work from a client inventory prepared by the design team. We can also coordinate overflow and seasonal storage with adjacent Utility, Laundry & Boot Room Joinery and Fitted Storage & Alcove Units.

Doors, fronts and visibility

How much of a wardrobe is on show – and how it reads from the room – is as important as the internal layout. We tune doors, frames and reveals to the architecture and to the level of display a client is comfortable with.

·        full-height doors that simplify the elevation and reduce visual noise

·        framed or panelled doors for more classic or transitional schemes, slab fronts for contemporary projects

·        glazed or reeded doors where clients are comfortable seeing silhouettes or curated displays

·        open hanging or niche moments used sparingly for frequently used items or particularly beautiful pieces

These decisions are grounded in the stylistic language defined on Joinery Styles and picked up again in adjacent Wall Panelling & Architectural Joinery and Internal Doors & Screens so that everything feels part of one family.

Lighting, mirrors and the dressing experience

Lighting and mirrors are crucial to how a dressing room actually feels in use. We design these in from the start rather than adding them at the end.

·        integrated vertical lighting to wardrobe interiors, positioned to minimise shadows on clothing and faces

·        illuminated hanging rails or shelf undersides where appropriate, coordinated with the wider lighting scheme

·        full-height mirrors, sometimes concealed within doors, and smaller mirrors at dressing tables

·        soft night or pathway lighting for early starts and late returns without waking others

We coordinate closely with lighting designers and electrical teams so that switching, dimming and maintenance remain straightforward.

Materials, finishes and hardware

Wardrobes and dressing rooms are highly tactile spaces. Clients interact with them multiple times a day, so materials and hardware need to feel considered and robust.

We build palettes from our Materials library – timbers, veneers, lacquers, stones, metals and fabrics – and align them with the stylistic cues captured on Joinery Styles.

·        timber and veneer interiors that feel warm and consistent, even behind closed doors

·        painted or lacquered fronts matched to bedroom walls for a quieter presence, or contrasted for a more tailored feel

·        handle choices – from finely detailed pulls to integrated edge pulls – that look refined and feel comfortable in the hand

·        considered use of metal trims, inlays and protective details at high-touch points

Working with awkward spaces and heritage contexts

Many of the most rewarding wardrobe projects involve awkward spaces – eaves, sloping ceilings, chimney breasts, existing panelling – particularly in period properties.

We are used to integrating wardrobes within older fabric, treating them as part of a broader Wall Panelling & Architectural Joinery or Heritage & Period-Style Joinery strategy where appropriate. Angled ceilings, beams and deep window reveals are all opportunities to create characterful storage rather than compromises.

In contemporary apartments and new-build homes, the task is often the opposite – using wardrobes and dressing-room joinery to introduce rhythm, depth and a sense of permanence.

Our process for wardrobe and dressing-room joinery

Our approach follows the same clear stages as our wider

Bespoke Joinery work, with additional emphasis on inventories and day-to-day use.

1. Brief & inventory We begin by understanding who will use each room, how they dress, what needs to be stored and any particular rituals or frustrations.

2. Room review and opportunities We review plans, sections and photographs – or visit site – to understand light, views, architectural features and where wardrobes or dressing rooms can be best located.

3. Layout options and elevations We develop layout options for both room and internal configurations, exploring how circulation, mirrors and seating work alongside storage.

4. Technical design & detailing We produce detailed drawings showing carcass construction, divisions, door types, internal components, lighting and coordination with services.

5. Materials and samples We prepare focused sample sets for interiors, fronts, handles and lighting, aligning them with decisions made across other scopes on Types of Joinery.

6. Production & installation Wardrobes and dressing-room joinery are manufactured through our network of workshops and installed in coordination with the main contractor, with careful setting out, templating where required and final adjustment on site.

Connecting wardrobes to the wider scheme

Wardrobes and dressing rooms rarely stand alone. They sit within a wider bedroom and suite narrative, and often touch several other pieces of joinery.

We make sure decisions taken here are carried through to adjacent scopes such as Headboards & Bedroom Feature Joinery, Media Walls & TV Joinery, Home Offices & Study Joinery, Fitted Storage & Alcove Units and, in hospitality projects, Hotel Guestroom Joinery. All of this sits within the structures laid out on Types of Joinery and the stylistic direction captured on Joinery Styles.

Next steps

If you are planning wardrobes or dressing rooms as part of a project, share your drawings, room photographs and any inventory or briefing notes with us.

We can respond with layout ideas, initial internal configurations and how these spaces could link into adjacent Headboards & Bedroom Feature Joinery, Fitted Storage & Alcove Units, Home Offices & Study Joinery and wider Residential Joinery or Hospitality Joinery packages. From there we move into detailed design, sampling and delivery in line with your programme.

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