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Shell Base Console Table

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Modern X-Style Console Table with Sea Shell Top & White Lacquer Base
By Jhon Ortiz, The Tailored Home
Located in Greenwich, CT
Modern console table. Elegant sea shell top with white lacquer x-style base. Can be customized with
Category

2010s American Modern Console Tables

Materials

Maple

Shell Form Console Table With Stone Top
Located in Locust Valley, NY
A shell form console table base with a stone top with beveled edges in creamy white finish.
Category

Mid-20th Century Console Tables

Materials

Stone

Shell Form Console Table With Stone Top
Shell Form Console Table With Stone Top
H 31 in W 52.5 in D 16.5 in
Grosfeld House Console Table on Gilded Shell Base
By Grosfeld House
Located in Astoria, NY
A vintage console table, produced by Grosfeld House circa 1940s-1950s, with an extravagantly large
Category

Mid-20th Century Hollywood Regency Console Tables

Materials

Plaster, Wood

Mirrored Console with Carved Shell Base circa 1940s
Located in Dallas, TX
a faceted top console with eglomise floral designs, the base is an open carved shell sitting on a
Category

Vintage 1940s Unknown Console Tables

Materials

Wood, Paint, Mirror

Edward Wormley for Dunbar Console Table
By Dunbar Furniture, Edward Wormley
Located in Los Angeles, CA
A shell pedestal base console table designed by Edward Wormley for Dunbar ca. 1940's with a
Category

Vintage 1940s American Console Tables

Materials

Pine

Edward Wormley for Dunbar Console Table
Edward Wormley for Dunbar Console Table
H 29.25 in W 32.25 in D 12 in
Edward Wormley Console on Shell Base for Dunbar
By Dunbar Furniture, Edward Wormley
Located in Astoria, NY
A classically influenced console table by designer Edward Wormley for Dunbar, produced circa 1940s
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Console Tables

Materials

Wood

Maison Baguès Style Console Table with Capiz Shell Top on Brass Faux Bamboo Base
By Maison Baguès
Located in Astoria, NY
A vintage French console table, produced circa 1950s in the style of Maison Baguès, with a capiz
Category

Vintage 1950s French Mid-Century Modern Console Tables

Materials

Brass

Hollywood Regency Style Shell Console Half Moon Antiqued Glass Top Mirror Base
By Maison Jansen
Located in Manhasset, NY
Hollywood Regency style console table, circa 1940s, overall painted and parcel-gilt, the half-moon
Category

Vintage 1940s Argentine Hollywood Regency Console Tables

Materials

Glass, Wood

20th Century Cast Shell
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Cast Stone Shell. Console/Table Base or Individual Object
Category

20th Century American Architectural Elements

20th Century Cast Shell
20th Century Cast Shell
H 30 in W 30 in D 25 in
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Shell Base Console Table For Sale on 1stDibs

With a vast inventory of beautiful furniture at 1stDibs, we’ve got just the shell base console table you’re looking for. A shell base console table — often made from wood, stone and marble — can elevate any home. If you’re shopping for a shell base console table, we have 201 options in-stock, while there are 37 modern editions to choose from as well. You’ve searched high and low for the perfect shell base console table — we have versions that date back to the 18th Century alongside those produced as recently as the 21st Century are available. A shell base console table made by Rococo designers — as well as those associated with Art Deco — is very popular. A well-made shell base console table has long been a part of the offerings for many furniture designers and manufacturers, but those produced by R & Y Augousti, Grosfeld House and Christopher Kreiling Studio are consistently popular.

How Much is a Shell Base Console Table?

The average selling price for a shell base console table at 1stDibs is $5,620, while they’re typically $250 on the low end and $395,000 for the highest priced.

Finding the Right Console-tables for You

Few pieces of furniture are celebrated for their functionality as much as their decorative attributes in the way that console tables are. While these furnishings are not as common in today’s interiors as their coffee-table and side-table counterparts, console tables are stylish home accents and have become more prevalent over the years.

The popularity of wood console tables took shape during the 17th and 18th centuries in French and Italian culture, and were exclusively featured in the palatial homes of the upper class. The era’s outwardly sculptural examples of these small structures were paired with mirrors or matching stools and had tabletops of marble. They were most often half-moon-shaped and stood on two scrolled giltwood legs, and because they weren’t wholly supported on their two legs rather than the traditional four, their flat-backed supports were intended to hug the wall behind them and were commonly joined by an ornate stretcher. The legs were affixed or bolted to the wall with architectural brackets called console brackets — hence, the name we know them by today — which gave the impression that they were freestanding furnishings. While console tables introduced a dose of drama in the foyer of any given aristocrat — an embodiment of Rococo-style furniture — the table actually occupied minimal floor space (an attractive feature in home furniture). As demand grew and console tables made their way to other countries, they gained recognition as versatile additions to any home.

Contemporary console tables comprise many different materials and are characterized today by varying shapes and design styles. It is typical to find them made of marble, walnut or oak and metal. While modern console tables commonly feature four legs, you can still find the two-legged variety, which is ideal for nestling behind the sofa. A narrow console table is a practical option if you need to save space — having outgrown their origins as purely ornamental, today’s console tables are home to treasured decorative objects, help fill empty foyers and, outfitted with drawers or a shelf, can provide a modest amount of storage as needed.

The rich collection of antique, new and vintage console tables on 1stDibs includes everything from 19th-century gems designed in the Empire style to unique rattan pieces and more.