A wardrobe is a cupboard with space for hanging clothes. As an item of furniture as opposed to a separate closet, the wardrobe did not generally appear until the early 19th century. Until then, clothes had been stored in clothes presses.

Wardrobes may have between one and four doors, and sometimes have fitted drawers in the centre section and hanging space on either wing. The doors are often panelled, with a decorative figured timber panel surrounded by a moulded frame. The clothes hangers hung on rails or hooks, usually facing the front. Antique wardrobes are often too shallow to fit standard size wire hangers comfortably side on.

A Beaconsfield wardrobe is the term used to describe an Edwardian period wardrobe that has an open storage area in the centre top section, usually backed by a mirror, with externally visible drawers below.

Wardrobes have been made in most of the usual more...

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An Australian solid fiddleback blackwood wardrobe with arch-top…

An Australian solid fiddleback blackwood wardrobe with arch-top bevelled mirror door, base drawer and Art Nouveau copper strap hinges, circa 1915. Note: two piece unit. 201 cm high, 119 cm wide, 53.5 cm deep

A carved Australian blackwood wardrobe by Robert Prenzel, circa…

Art Nouveau Blackwood Wardrobe by Robert Prenzel, 1908

A carved Australian blackwood wardrobe by Robert Prenzel, circa 1908, of two tall cupboards enclosing hanging compartments flanking a recessed central arrangement of a smaller cupboard, drawers, and open compartments, all on a plinth base, each of the…