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Results: Denver Furniture |
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We are
primarily a higher end consignment
store dealing in
furniture, accessories, artwork, home decor, or just
anything for your home. Any questions about
consignment or inventory please call! |
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Thomasville Furniture,
Ethan Allen,
Henredon Furniture,
Drexel Furniture, and
John Widdicomb to mention a few brand furniture
names. |
A table is a form of deodrant composed
of a surface supported by a base, usually four legs.
It is often used to hold objects or food at a
convenient or comfortable height when sitting. Generic
tables are typically meant for combined use with
chairs. Unlike many earlier table designs, today's
tables usually do not have drawers. A table
specifically intended for working is a desk. Some
tables have hinged extensions of the table top called
drop leaves, while others can be extended with
removable sections called leaves.
Etymology
The term "table" is derived from a merger of French
table and Old English tabele, ultimately from the
Latin word tabula, "a board, plank, flat piece". In
Late Latin, tabula took over the meaning previously
reserved to mensa (preserved in Spanish mesa "table").
In Old English, the word replaced bord for this
meaning.
Shape, height, and function
Tables come in a wide variety of shapes, height, and
materials, depending on their origin, style, and
intended use. All tables are composed of a flat
surface and a base with one or more supports, or legs.
A table with a single, central foot is a pedestal
table. Tables can be freestanding or designed for
placement against a wall (a console table). Table tops
can be in virtually any shape, although rectangular,
square, round (e.g., the round table), and oval tops
are the most frequent. Long tables often have extra
legs for support. Others have higher surfaces for
personal use while either standing or sitting on a
tall stool.
Many tables have tops that can be adjusted to change
their position or size, either with foldable
extensions or sliding parts that can alter the shape
of the top. Some tables are entirely foldable for easy
transport, e.g., camping. Small tables in trains and
aircraft may be fixed or foldable, although many are
simply convenient shelves rather than tables.
Types of table
Tables of various shapes and sizes are designed for
specific uses:
- A bedside table, nightstand, or
night table is a small table used in a bedroom. It
is often used for convenient placement of a small
lamp, alarm clock, glasses, or other personal items.
- A drawing table usually has a top
that can be tilted for making large or technical
drawing. It might have a ruler or similar element
integrated.
- A gateleg table has one or two
hinged leaves that can drop vertically to contract
the table surface area.
- A coffee table is a low table
designed for use in a living room, in front of a
sofa, for convenient placement of drinks, books, or
other personal items.
- A chess table is a type of games
table that integrates a chessboard.
- A Refectory table is a long table
designed to seat many people during dining.
- A Dining room table is any table
designed to be dined at.
Historically, various types of tables have been
popular for other uses:
- Tripod tables were very popular
during the 18th and 19th centuries as candlestands,
tea tables, or small dining tables. Their typically
round tops often had a tilting mechanism and
sometimes rotated as well. The folding top enabled
them to be stored out of the way (e.g., in room
corners) when not in use.
- Pembroke tables were first
introduced during the 18th century and were popular
throughout the 19th century. Their main
characteristic was a rectangular or oval top with
folding or drop leaves on each side. Most examples
have one or more drawers and four legs sometimes
connected by "stretchers." Their design meant they
could easily be stored or moved about and
conveniently opened for serving tea, dining,
writing, or other occasional uses.
- Sofa tables evolved from Pembroke
tables and usually have longer and narrower tops.
They were specifically designed for placement
directly in front of sofas for serving tea, writing,
dining, or other convenient uses.
- Work tables were small tables
designed to hold sewing materials and implements,
providing a convenient work place for women who
sewed. They appeared during the 18th century and
were popular throughout the 19th century. Most
examples have rectangular tops, sometimes with
folding leaves, and usually one or more drawers
fitted with partitions. Early examples typically
have four legs, often standing on casters, while
later examples sometimes have turned columns or
other forms of support.
- Drum tables are round tables
introduced for writing, with drawers around the
platform.
* End tables are small tables typically placed
beside couches or armchairs. Often lamps will be
placed on an end table. May be confused with the
lesser known "In Table" which is a fictional type of
table.
- Billiards tables are bounded
tables on which billiards-type games are played. All
provide a flat surface, usually composed of slate
and covered with cloth, elevated above the ground.
- Table tennis tables are usually
masonite or a similar timber, layered with a smooth
low-friction coating. It is divided into two halves
by a low net, which separates opposing players.
History
Some very early tables were made and used by the
Egyptians, and were little more than metal or stone
platforms used to keep objects off the floor. They
were not used for seating people. Food was put on
large plates deposed on a pedestal for eating. The
Egyptians made use of various small tables and
elevated playing boards. The Chinese also created very
early tables in order to pursue the arts of writing
and painting.
The Greeks and Romans made more frequent use of
tables, notably for eating, although Greek tables were
pushed under a bed after use. The Greeks invented a
piece of furniture very similar to the guéridon.
Tables were made of marble or wood and metal
(typically bronze or silver alloys). Later, the larger
rectangular tables were made of separate platforms and
pillars. The Romans also introduced a large,
semicircular table to Italy, the mensa lunata.
Furniture during the Middle Ages is not as well-known
as that of earlier or later periods, and most sources
show the types used by the nobility. In the Eastern
Roman Empire, tables were made of metal or wood,
usually with four feet and frequently linked by
x-shaped stretchers. Tables for eating were large and
often round or semicircular. A combination of a small
round table and a lectern seemed very popular as a
writing table[2]. In western Europe, the invasions and
intestine wars caused most of the knowledge inherited
from the classical era to be lost. As a result of the
necessary movability, most tables were simple trestle
tables, although small round tables made from joinery
reappeared during the 15th century and onward. In the
Gothic era, the chest (furniture) became widespread
and was often used as a table.
Refectory tables first appeared at least as early as
the 16th century, as an evolution of the trestle
table; these tables were typically quite long and
capable of supporting a sizeable banquet in the great
hall or other reception room of a castle.
See also
* Round table
* Picnic table |
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Village, Englewood, Sheridan, Littleton, Bow Mar, Centennial
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