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Sideboards

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Sideboards For Sale
Color:  Black
Color:  Purple
Midcentury Brass and Black Lacquered Wood Étagère/Sideboard by Kim Moltzer
Located in Vilnius, LT
Midcentury brass étagère/sideboard/shelves by Kim Moltzer from 1970s. This furniture consists of two parts: top structure in square brass and black lacquered wood with doors and she...
Category

Mid-20th Century French Mid-Century Modern Sideboards

Materials

Brass

Early 19th Century Biedermeier Mahogany Commode, Berlin, circa 1820
Located in Berlin, DE
Biedermeier commode with tapering breakfront corpus and stepped pediment, with three long drawers on block feet. The whole veneered with mahogany on pine in book-match pattern - the ...
Category

1820s German Biedermeier Antique Sideboards

Materials

Wood, Mahogany

Antique French Antique Buffet with Star and Diamond Motif From Directoire Period
Located in Chicago, IL
Antique Country French Directoire Style Buffet, circa 1740-1780. Our Old Plank inhouse workshop spent over a month (over 200 man hours) rebuilding the cabinet from the bottom up, so ...
Category

1770s French Directoire Antique Sideboards

Materials

Steel

Art Deco French Sideboard in Mahoganies Marble Top
Located in Miami, FL
Mahogany middle size French Art Deco sideboard. Excellent and high quality craftsmanship. Superb mahogany and interesting hardware. Dry bar in the middle part. Beautiful marble top. ...
Category

1930s French Art Deco Vintage Sideboards

Materials

Marble, Bronze

Antique, New and Vintage Sideboards

Once simply boards made of wood that were used to support ceremonial dining, sideboards have taken on much greater importance since their modest first appearance. In Italy, the sideboard was basically a credenza, a solid furnishing with cabinet doors. It was initially intended as an integral piece of any dining room where the wealthy gathered for meals in the southern European country.

Later, in England and France, sideboards retained their utilitarian purpose — a place to keep hot water for rinsing silverware and from which to serve cold drinking water — but would evolve into double-bodied structures that allowed for the display of serveware and utensils on open shelves. We would likely call these buffets, as they’re taller than a sideboard. (Trust us — there is an order to all of this!)

The sideboard is often deemed a buffet in the United States, from the French buffet à deux corps, which referred to a storage and display case. However, a buffet technically possesses a tiered or shelved superstructure for displaying attractive kitchenware and certainly makes more sense in the context of buffet dining — abundant meals served for crowds of people.

An antique or vintage sideboard today is a sophisticated and stylish component in sumptuous dining rooms of every shape, size and decor scheme, as well as a statement of its own, showcased in art galleries and museums. Furniture maker and artist Paul Evans, whose work has been the subject of various celebrated museum exhibitions, created ornamented, welded and patinated sideboards for Directional Furniture, collections such as the Cityscape series that speak to his place in revolutionary brutalist furniture design as much as they echo the origins of these sturdy, functional structures centuries ago.

If mid-century modern sideboards are more to your liking than an 18th-century mahogany sideboard with decorative inlays by Hepplewhite, the particularly elegant pieces crafted by designers Hans Wegner, Edward Wormley or Florence Knoll are often sought by today’s collectors.

Whether you have a specific era or style in mind or you’re open to browsing a vast collection to find the right fit, 1stDibs has a variety of antique, new and vintage sideboards to choose from.

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