To make it, you will need very few available materials: two piano loops, several 30X30 wooden blocks of various lengths, a bit of hardboard, chipboard, as well as several meters of wood-like wallpaper or paper, varnish and, possibly, gouache.
The dimensions of the cabinet are up to you. The door can be two- and three-leaved, but the width of each leaf should be no more than 400 mm. Between themselves, the wings are connected by piano loops. To make the sash light, it is made on the frame of the racks.
The frame is upholstered with hardboard, then pasted over with wallpaper "wood-like" or paper. Strips are applied to the paper with a gouache brush, which resemble the structure of the tree, or the entire panel of the sash is painted in one tone. After drying, furniture lacquer is applied in two layers on a painted surface or wallpaper.
When the wings are ready, a handle is attached to the one that attaches directly to the stand on the piano loop. Two racks and four side wall bars are fastened to the room wall with nails, screws, and to the concrete walls - using dowels. Then the racks are connected by the upper and lower crossbars. On top of the crossbars you can nail a piece of hardboard or plywood, which will serve as a cabinet lid.
Internal shelves are superimposed on small bars mounted on the walls. Cut the shelves themselves from chipboard or boards. A cabinet of drawers is placed at the bottom of the cabinet. The cabinet should be 100-150 mm wider than the folding cabinet door, so that the drawers extend freely. All exterior wooden parts are tinted in tone with the painted sashes and are also coated with furniture lacquer in two layers.
In the closet, hanger-racks are fastened to the walls with blocks, after they have been planed and sanded.
Hardwood and necessarily non-coniferous wood is taken for laths. Drawers for the cabinet are made of plywood, hardboard or thin, sanded planks from the drawers.
The only drawback of such a cabinet is that it cannot be moved from place to place, and therefore the angle for its assembly must be determined in advance so that it does not interfere with the passage.