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Our Closet Article just for you!
28 Must Haves For Your Closet
Your closet is your master piece of beauty, it has all your timeless pieces, some things you will never throw out no matter the condition and some things that are never to be worn, but you still love them. It contains images to you of your lifetime that mold who you are or who you always wanted to be. If you need to clean it up and reorganize so you can find things then do so. You most likely have 10 – 20 items you could be using now that you have forgotten about.
By organizing it up you will create many new outfits!
Here is a list of 28 must haves that should be in your closet.
Little Black Dress
Awesome Jeans
Denim Jacket
Throw on Sweater for all occasions
A White Tee
Pencil Skirt
Leather Jacket
Low Boots
High Boots
Black Pumps
Red High Heel Shoes
The Single Strap Stiletto
Bright Framed Sunglasses
1 Wrap Dress
1 Tuxedo Shirt
A perfectly fitted Vest (or 3)
Black Pants
Crisp White Blouse
A Sharp Tailored Blazer
A Classic Tote
Classic Coat
Statement Necklace
Oversized Watch
1 leopard print scarf
Your favorite Dress of all time
At least 1 long Gown (that you LOVE, for Weddings or Elegant Occasions)
Heels for the Gown
1 Gorgeous Clutch Bag
The History of the Wardrobe
Wardrobe-Furniture
Written by: The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica
Wardrobe, in furniture, a large cupboard, usually equipped with drawers, a mirror, and other devices, used for storing clothes.
The word wardrobe has a long and varied history. Geoffrey Chaucer used it to mean a lavatory, and for some time it signified not a piece of furniture but a room or apartment; in medieval England, for instance, the king’s wardrobe was the center of a good deal of administrative machinery. The actual piece of furniture in which clothes were kept was originally known as a press, and at quite an early date its division into two parts—one for hanging garments, the other for laying them out flat—became established. By the 17th century the word wardrobe was coming to be accepted as descriptive of this kind of piece, while the earlier emphasis on heavy carvings on and surrounding the doors was being supplanted by elaborate veneers and marquetry. In some instances, wardrobes were incorporated into the paneling of bedrooms. By the end of the 18th century wardrobes usually consisted of a clothes press flanked by slightly recessed cupboards.
The mass production of furniture in the 19th century, combined with growing affluence, which meant that people possessed more clothes, led to great importance being attached to the wardrobe as a piece of bedroom furniture. Massively and ornately constructed, they were usually part of a bedroom suite consisting of drawers, washstand, dressing table, and bed. In the 1860s the practice was introduced of fitting a mirror on the exterior of the center door; though this arrangement is still found in the 20th century, it is more customary for it to be on the inside of the door. Contemporary fashion also tends to prefer wardrobes that form an integral part of the architectural structure, often called closets.