Not every bedroom comes with built in cupboards. Older terraces, converted flats and box rooms above garages often skip them altogether, leaving a blank wall and a long list of jumpers, shirts and shoes with nowhere obvious to live. The answer is to choose freestanding wardrobes that do the work of fitted joinery without the price tag or the disruption.
Below are six approaches that suit different room shapes and storage habits.
A single tall wardrobe placed against the longest unbroken wall behaves like a fitted unit without the building work. Pick something close to ceiling height to avoid the dust trap of a gap above. Models with sliding doors save the swing space hinged doors would steal. Browse our sliding wardrobes for finishes that suit both modern and classic interiors.
Two two door wardrobes pushed together with a small filler panel in between can read almost as a single fitted unit. The advantage over one wide wardrobe is flexibility. You can split the interior between hanging on one side and shelves or drawers on the other. The 2 doors wardrobe range is the natural starting point for this approach.
Corners are often wasted in bedrooms because furniture is pushed flat against straight walls. A three door wardrobe placed across a corner uses the dead diagonal space and creates a natural recess for a chair or dressing table on the other side. The 3 doors wardrobe collection includes models designed to anchor a corner without overwhelming it.
A wardrobe does not have to hold everything. A separate open rail for the week’s outfits keeps the daily routine quick and stops the wardrobe doors swinging open every morning. Our clothes storage section includes rails, valet stands and compact garment racks that work alongside a main wardrobe.
Mirrored wardrobe doors are particularly useful in narrow rooms because they reflect the opposite wall and the window, doubling the apparent depth. They also remove the need for a separate full length mirror, which saves another piece of furniture. The reflection works best when the wardrobe sits across from natural light rather than a busy patterned wall.
A row of plain boxes or fabric baskets along the top of a wardrobe is a practical way to use the gap below the ceiling. Stick to one colour and one size for a calm look. Out of season bedding, hats, scarves and other items used a few times a year live happily up there without cluttering the main hanging space.
Measure the doorway and stairwell as well as the wall. A tall wardrobe that fits the bedroom but cannot turn the corner of the stairs is no use to anyone. Most freestanding wardrobes from the wider wardrobes range arrive flat packed for this reason, which solves the access problem but adds an assembly afternoon to the diary.
Think also about the floor. Soft carpet can let a heavy wardrobe lean slightly over time. A timber batten or two under the base spreads the weight and keeps the doors aligned. On bare floorboards a thin felt pad protects the finish.
Finally, consider how the wardrobe relates to the rest of the room. A piece in a similar tone to the bed and chest of drawers feels intentional. A wardrobe in a clashing finish reads as an afterthought, even if the cabinet itself is well made. The full range at Furniture in Fashion makes it simpler to coordinate finishes across several pieces.
Most adult wardrobes are between 50 cm and 60 cm deep. Anything shallower will struggle to take coat hangers facing forward.
Sliding doors suit rooms where floor space is tight or where the wardrobe sits opposite the bed. Hinged doors give full access to the interior at once, which is useful for wider units.
Most modern wardrobes include a wall fixing strap. Use it. A loaded wardrobe is heavier than it looks and a tipping accident is one of the easiest household incidents to prevent.
Yes, although a standard rectangular wardrobe will only reach the lowest point of the slope. For loft rooms, look at shorter cabinets paired with open shelving above to use the higher headroom.
For small bedrooms, yes. An interior mirror means you can dress without committing extra floor space to a separate freestanding mirror.
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