Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Few would argue with the statement that Dorothy Draper was the most influential American interior decorator of the past century. They might make a case for Elsie de Wolfe, who had banished heavy dark furnishings and finishes from late Edwardian-era rooms, or plump for Sister Parish, and her easeful gentrified look. But Draper simply was the face of decorating. Savvy, decisive and trim — she looked the part. And her 1939 book Decorating Is Fun! and a regular column for Good Housekeeping maintained that public image. As did, of course, her work.
Born to wealth in Tuxedo Park, New York, Draper received little formal schooling but did travel extensively in Europe, where she refined her eye and tastes. Draper invented the interior design style known these days as Hollywood Regency. She loved bold vibrant color, which she deployed in unusual combinations (pink paired with eggplant was a favorite). She had a penchant for black-and-white checkered floors.
Draper liked a room to have a statement piece on the wall, preferably a plaster scrollwork-framed mirror. But most of all Draper liked such things as huge moldings brimming with Baroque detail; upholstery fabrics with overscaled florals, such as her signature print called “Cabbage Rose.” Draper could keep it simple. Many of her chairs are unfussy slipper or club chairs, with maybe a little tufting. Her cabinets and other case pieces are equally elegant — the quiet España chest, which has three drawers with round brass pulls, has been a staple of classic decorating ever since Draper designed it in 1953.
During a heyday of production in the mid-1950s, Heritage entered into a partnership with Draper, while Frank Lloyd Wright created several lines of furniture for Henredon — the works by both designers, which included Draper's España line and Viennese furnishings group, were marketed under the Heritage-Henredon name owing to a cross-licensing agreement between the brands.
Because of her passion for scale and grand gestures, most of Draper’s commissions were for hotels, resorts and apartment towers. In these spaces, she could follow her whim and produce such extravagances as the massive, playfully modernist chandelier in the lobby of the Greenbrier resort in West Virginia; the wildly Baroque fireplace in the lounge of New York’s Hampshire House; and the towering lacquered doors of the Arrowhead Springs Hotel in California. The woman thought big.
Browse a collection of vintage Dorothy Draper furniture on 1stDibs.
1950s American Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass
Mid-20th Century American Hollywood Regency Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass
1940s American Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Wood
1970s Belgian Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Marble, Brass
21st Century and Contemporary American Arts and Crafts Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Mahogany, Oak, Walnut
1980s Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Metal
1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Glass, Wood
2010s Italian Modern Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Wood
2010s American Modern Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Oak
1960s American Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Ceramic
1920s Austrian Bauhaus Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Metal
1960s French Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Metal
1970s Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Mirror, Wood
1960s American Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Resin, Giltwood
1960s American Hollywood Regency Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass
2010s American Chippendale Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Wood
Mid-20th Century American Hollywood Regency Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass
1940s American Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
21st Century and Contemporary American Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Wood, Leather
20th Century American Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass
1950s American Vintage Dorothy Draper Side Tables
Brass