
Full-Length Dressing Mirror
The full-length dressing mirror should be placed on the North or East wall, so t
Local term: पूर्ण दर्पण — उत्तर/पूर्व दीवार (Pūrṇa Darpaṇa — Uttara/Pūrva Dīvāra)
Modern Vastu recommends full-length mirrors on North or East walls. Interior designers also prefer these placements for natural light considerations — North light is consistent; East light provides warm morning illumination for dressing. The mirror should be at least 150 cm tall for a complete head-to-toe reflection.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; Interior Design Best Practices
Unique: Modern practice adds lighting considerations — North-wall mirrors receive consistent natural light; East-wall mirrors receive warm morning light. Both are superior to South/West mirrors that may create harsh afternoon glare.
Full-Length Dressing Mirror
Architectural diagram for Full-Length Dressing Mirror

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
N, E
Full-length mirror on N or E wall. At least 150 cm height, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical Alankara prescriptions with contemporary interior design practice — the architect must verify proper placement and condition for full energetic benefit.
Acceptable
NE, NW, ENE, NNE, NNW
NE, NW walls. Ensure mirror does not face bed.
Prohibited
S, SW
Full-length mirror on S or SW wall, or directly facing the bed.
Sub-Rules
- Full-length mirror on North or East wall — person faces North/East while dressing▲ Moderate
- Mirror shows complete head-to-toe reflection without cropping▲ Minor
- Full-length mirror on South or Southwest wall — person faces South/SW while dressing▼ Moderate
- Full-length mirror directly facing the bed, reflecting sleepers▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

The full-length dressing mirror should be placed on the North or East wall, so the person dressing faces Kubera (prosperity) or Surya (vitality). The mirror must show a complete head-to-toe reflection — an incomplete image symbolically fragments self-perception. Avoid the South/SW wall, as facing Yama or Rahu during self-preparation creates a negative directional imprint on the day's beginning.
Common Violations
Full-length mirror on South or Southwest wall — person faces Yama/Rahu's direction while dressing
Traditional consequence: Daily self-preparation under Yama's or Rahu's directional influence creates a subtle negative imprint on the day's beginning. The person may feel heavier, more anxious, or less confident — the directional energy colors the self-perception ritual.
Mirror too small to show complete head-to-toe reflection — crops head or feet
Traditional consequence: An incomplete reflection fragments self-image. In Vastu symbolism, a headless reflection suggests Buddhi Kshaya (intellect-loss); a footless reflection suggests Sthirata Kshaya (stability-loss). The mirror should show the complete person.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition connects the dressing mirror to the Shringara Rasa (aesthetic sentiment) — one of the Nava Rasas (nine sentiments). The directional alignment ensures Shringara unfolds under auspicious influence.
Wada architecture often included a built-in North-wall niche for the full-length mirror in the Shringara Kone.
Tamil tradition emphasizes Poornata (completeness) — the Peru Kannadi must show the entire person. A truncated reflection is Apoornam (incomplete) — symbolically fragmenting the person's day.
Telugu tradition connects the complete reflection to Sampurnata (wholeness) — the full Addamu reflects the whole person, supporting Sampurna day ahead.
Jain tradition connects the complete reflection to Samyak (right/complete) self-perception — an incomplete reflection is Mithya (false/partial).
Kerala's Pennu Kanal tradition — the formal bride-viewing ceremony — always positions the mirror so the bride faces North (Kubera) while seeing her complete reflection.
Haveli tradition's Shringaar Kaksha (dressing room) is a purpose-built space — the North-wall mirror is a architectural fixture, not a portable addition.
Bengali Bou Sajano tradition — the bridal dressing ceremony — positions the mirror so the bride's complete reflection faces North, with Lakshmi's blessing upon the whole preparation.
Kalinga tradition connects the complete reflection to Sampurnata — the same concept of wholeness applied in Jagannath temple proportions.
Sikh tradition connects the complete reflection to Sampuran (wholeness) — the person should see their complete Roop (form) before stepping out.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Relocate decorative element to the North zone per Modern tradition
Modern VastuRelocate the full-length mirror to the North or East wall of the dressing area — the person should face North or East while viewing their full reflection
If the mirror cannot be moved from the South/SW wall, angle it slightly so the person does not face directly South while standing before it
Ensure the mirror is tall enough to show the complete reflection — at least 150 cm height for adults, mounted with its center at the person's eye level
If the mirror is in the bedroom, ensure it does not face the bed — use a folding screen or position the mirror on a wall perpendicular to the bed's axis
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate decorative element to the Uttara zone per Vedic tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate decorative element to the Uttar zone per Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Darpana for full-body viewing shall be upon the Uttara (North) or Purva (East) face of the dressing chamber. The person who prepares themselves facing Kubera's direction aligns daily self-care with prosperity; facing Surya's direction aligns it with vitality.”
“The Deha Darpana (body mirror) must show the complete Pratibimba (reflection) — from Shirsha (head) to Pada (feet). An incomplete reflection fragments the viewer's self-image. Place the Deha Darpana on the Uttara or Purva wall of the Shringara Griha (dressing room).”
“In the chamber of Shringara (adornment), the full Darpana faces the person who stands before it. Let this person face Uttara or Purva — the directions of Kubera and Surya — so that the act of self-preparation begins under auspicious gaze.”
“The full-length Darpana is a Sampoorna Darpana (complete mirror) — it must show the entire person without truncation. The head unseen suggests Buddhi (intellect) neglected; the feet unseen suggests Sthirata (stability) lost. Place it on the Uttara wall for Kubera's blessing upon the dressed person.”

Check Your Floor Plan