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The Closet of your dreams...

  • Lois Wilson
  • Jan 7
  • 2 min read

Updated: 5 days ago

Some girls dreamed of their wedding. We dreamed of our closet.

Cemented by iconic scenes in 13 Going on 30, Clueless and Sex and the City, the ultimate girl dream wasn’t a man — it was a wardrobe.


More than shelves and doors, these spaces represented independence, possibility, and the quiet luxury of choosing yourself. They were places to store not just clothes, but ambition, identity, and the couture trophies of a life built on your own terms. Below, a study of dream closets — each with its own personality, mood, and muse.



The Princess-Pink Boudoir
Muse: Blair Waldorf

The ultimate closet for the girl who always suspected she was royalty. This closet leans into old-world femininity: blush drapery, arched mirrors edged in brass, and carpeting that softens every step. Lighting, flattering and indirect. It’s for someone who dresses with intention and hierarchy.


The Polished Power Dressing Room
Muse: Miranda Priestly


For the lady who edits for a living, everything here is deliberate. Clean cabinetry, symmetrical shelving, perfectly calibrated lighting.


This closet belongs to someone whose wardrobe is a loved extension of their inner world. Luxury, edited.



The Romantic Maximalist Wardrobe
Muse: Carrie Bradshaw


For the woman who thrives on lovable chaos, here is a closet with personalities as diverse yet harmonious as a Carries roster.


Patterns, colour-drenched shelving, unexpected textures. This closet celebrates accumulation — stories told through shoes, bags, and dresses collected over time. Lighting is playful rather than perfect; mirrors are layered, not singular.




The Soft-Life Sanctuary
Muse: Gabby Solis

The ultimate housewife hideaway this is where indulgence meets ease. Plush carpeting, soft seating, gentle lighting that feels flattering at any hour. Storage is generous for all those shopping sprees.


This closet is for someone who enjoys the ritual of dressing to be seen.



The 90s Girly Pop Fantasy
Muse: Lizzie McGuire(and, unapologetically, Barbie)

Leaning fully into nostalgia: Girlie pop pink-on-pink cabinetry, playful shoe displays, glossy finishes, and a sense of joy that doesn’t ask permission. Think coordinated shelves, visible heels, bags treated as accessories rather than investments.

These are closets for someone who dresses intuitively. Mood over rules. Fun over everything. For the girl who is literally just a girl.



The Clueless Closet
Muse: Cher Horowitz


Chers Clueless closet is often remembered as novelty, but its brilliance lies in how seriously it takes dressing as a system. This is a space built around clarity: clean lines, bright lighting, and total visibility. Nothing is hidden, nothing is overcomplicated. The now-iconic digital outfit selector wasn’t about excess — it was about removing friction from decision-making.

The is upbeat with pops of print that feel distinctly 90s Beverly Hills.




 
 
 

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