C. S. Lewis' Wardrobe

Origins
C. S. Lewis was a writer and a Christian apologist, writing fantasy and Christian apologetics and was a friend of J. R. R. Tolkien. He died November 22, 1963, along with another famed author, Aldous Huxley. Both their deaths received minimal media attention compared to the assassination of John F. Kennedy that same day. Some of his famous novels include The Screwtape Letters, The Space Trilogy and his famed Chronicles of Narnia.

Efects
The wardrobe was originally his own and was unknown to Lewis that the wardrobe was an artifact. When an imaginary scene is created, that world is accessible to the creator and anyone else through entering the wardrobe. Like in the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, time passes at different rates inside and outside the wardrobe. The downside is that the person may decide to stay in the other world or end up being unable to return back.