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Sideboards

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Sideboards For Sale
Style: Georgian
Style: Baroque
English Dark Oak Georgian 1800s Dresser Base with Three Drawers and Carved Legs
Located in Atlanta, GA
An English Georgian period oak dresser base circa 1800 with three drawers, carved legs, brass hardware including teardrop pulls, pot holder shelf and dark patina. This English Georgi...
Category

Early 19th Century English Georgian Antique Sideboards

Materials

Brass

George III Flame Mahogany Sideboard
Located in BROOKLYN, NY
Georgian Hondurian mahogany bow front sideboard and server. Beautiful dark brown color with an old surface. Strong brass ring pull hardware. Tall He...
Category

1850s English George III Antique Sideboards

Materials

Brass

George III Style Mahogany Inlaid Sideboard
Located in Westwood, NJ
Georgian style crotch mahogany veneered demilune sideboard with contrasting marquetry fan inlays to the top and cupboard doors. With carved stop fluted details, three doors and one d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Vietnamese George III Sideboards

Materials

Mahogany, Oak

18th Century French Oak Buffet Cupboard Sideboard
Located in Vosselaar, BE
A outstanding early 18th century oak buffet sideboard. Armoires like these would be used to hold table- and silverware or present dishes in a p...
Category

Early 18th Century French Baroque Antique Sideboards

Materials

Oak

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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