Butcher Blocks
1950s American Industrial Vintage Butcher Blocks
Maple
1910s French Art Nouveau Vintage Butcher Blocks
Brass
19th Century French Other Antique Butcher Blocks
Oak, Pine
Late 19th Century French Antique Butcher Blocks
Beech
19th Century French Other Antique Butcher Blocks
Steel
19th Century French Antique Butcher Blocks
Metal
Early 20th Century American Industrial Butcher Blocks
Wood, Maple
Early 20th Century Chinese Butcher Blocks
Elm
Mid-20th Century American Industrial Butcher Blocks
Wood, Maple
1890s French Antique Butcher Blocks
Metal, Steel, Iron
1960s Danish Mid-Century Modern Vintage Butcher Blocks
Teak
1930s Belgian Art Deco Vintage Butcher Blocks
Beech
Early 20th Century French Rustic Butcher Blocks
Maple
1950s Country Vintage Butcher Blocks
Metal
1950s American Industrial Vintage Butcher Blocks
Maple
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Butcher Blocks
Iron
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Butcher Blocks
Iron
1950s French Vintage Butcher Blocks
Steel
1950s French Vintage Butcher Blocks
Steel
1950s Danish Scandinavian Modern Vintage Butcher Blocks
Teak
1950s French Vintage Butcher Blocks
1950s American Vintage Butcher Blocks
Oak
Antique and Vintage Butcher Blocks
For the culinary star in your home, an antique or vintage butcher block is an indispensable accessory. Whether it’s a stand-alone table or island, a feature atop your rolling kitchen cart or a countertop application, this is a specific type of assembled wood surface for important food prep needs.
A butcher block is a designated work surface in a kitchen. Specifically, a butcher block affords you a strong and sturdy surface on which you can butcher meat as well as slice and dice vegetables. Having a designated area for this kind of work will help keep the kitchen sanitary and prevent potential damage to countertops.
Because wood is difficult to clean, stains easily and is an ideal surface for bacteria to flourish, counters were traditionally capped with metal. Butcher block — which, as a descriptor, refers to a specific material that is biodegradable and eco-friendly — was initially used in a commercial capacity but began to materialize in the early 20th century as countertops.
Butcher block is made from straight slats of wood that are glued together into thick slabs. The varieties include cherry, walnut, maple and oak. (The latter should be varnished or lacquered.) Construction types vary for butcher block countertops: There is edge grain (parallel boards that show their “edges”), end grain (small square pieces aligned vertically so that the “ends” are visible) and blended (with no specific pattern).
And there is a difference between a butcher block and a cutting board: A board in your kitchen that is used every day for slicing fruits and vegetables is generally called a cutting board. A more robust board — specifically, those that are constructed in the manner mentioned here — is a butcher block, which will be more appropriate for chopping meat as well as deboning.
The extensive collection of butcher blocks on 1stDibs includes French Provincial butcher blocks, rustic butcher blocks and more.