Terrazzo Coffee and Cocktail Tables
2010s Italian Modern Terrazzo Coffee and Cocktail Tables
Terrazzo
2010s Spanish Post-Modern Terrazzo Coffee and Cocktail Tables
Marble, Stone, Brass, Iron
Terrazzo Coffee Tables for Sale on 1stDibs
Shopping for a terrazzo coffee table?
Terrazzo has made a contemporary comeback in spades. Today's designers are bringing this speckly stone material into the 21st century, and terrazzo side tables, benches and other pieces of terrazzo furniture are finding their way into interiors all over the world.
Terrazzo is everywhere. Forget terrazzo flooring — we’re not talking about the drab material used for school corridors and hospital rooms in 1960s and ’70s. Today, terrazzo comes in an array of fresh and stylish varieties, including multicolor and white with black dots, like chocolate-chip ice cream, its characteristic speckles delicate or chunky. It graces the interiors of top hotels, luxury boutiques and contemporary homes. And it’s incorporated into lamps, seating, bookcases and tabletops.
“Terrazzo has been around forever. It is so vast and varied and lasts a lifetime,” says New York–based Australian interior designer Tali Roth. “The Instagram and Pinterest age leave us all wanting more uniqueness in our spaces, and I think terrazzo really does that for many interiors.”
The mosaic material originated in 15th-century Venice, where workers gathered marble scraps left over from the construction of palazzos and villas and embedded them in clay for their own terraces. Soon the clever composite was being used for the floors of Venetian palaces and Milanese entry halls. Eventually, it made its way to the U.S., where, in the 1920s, it became the flooring of choice.
Along the way, clay was replaced by cement and concrete, then epoxy resin. These stronger binders allow a larger variety of chips to be used, differing in material — from marble to granite to recycled glass — and size, from tiny specks to statement-making hunks.
When you've found the right terrazzo coffee table, the next step is styling it.
"With a glass coffee table, you also have to think about the surface underneath, like the rug or floor," explains NYC interior designer Tamara Eaton. "With wood and stone tables, you think about what’s on top."
Eaton suggests starting with at least one coffee table book. "If coffee table books are the base, add a few other big anchor pieces, like a vase or a tray," she says. "Just make sure not to cover the entire surface of the table. It’s hard to keep fresh flowers, but even a cactus or a succulent — or something dried — feels really nice. It’s fun to play with height."
The design possibilities of the Renaissance’s favorite DIY material are endless — find a collection of terrazzo coffee tables and other terrazzo tables for sale on 1stDibs.
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