Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Late 18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Kingwood
Early 20th Century French Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass
Early 20th Century French Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass, Bronze, Ormolu
Early 20th Century French Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Bronze
19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Carrara Marble, Ormolu
18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Ormolu
1770s French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Carrara Marble, Ormolu
18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Ormolu
Early 20th Century American Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Bronze, Ormolu
Late 18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Mahogany
Late 19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Marble, Bronze
Early 1900s French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Marble, Bronze, Ormolu
19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Marble, Brass
19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Leather, Mahogany
Late 20th Century Unknown Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Composition
19th Century French French Provincial Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass
19th Century English Hollywood Regency Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Metal
Early 20th Century American George III Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Mahogany
Late 19th Century American Victorian Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Mahogany
Late 20th Century British Art Deco Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Walnut, Burl
1850s French Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Hardwood
1930s European Louis XVI Vintage Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Marble, Brass
1760s Scottish Chippendale Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass
21st Century and Contemporary Vietnamese Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Wood
Early 20th Century American George III Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Mahogany
Mid-19th Century Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Oak
1770s French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Carrara Marble, Bronze
1980s French Louis XVI Vintage Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass
1920s Italian Louis XVI Vintage Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Walnut
1920s Italian Louis XVI Vintage Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Walnut
Mid-18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Bronze
Late 19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
20th Century French Louis XVI Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Brass
Late 19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Marble, Bronze
Late 19th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Late 18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Mahogany
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Dessert Tables and Tilt-top Tables
Fruitwood, Kingwood, Mahogany, Oak, Satinwood
Antique and Vintage Dessert Tables and Tilt-Top Tables
In preparing for your next holiday party or dinner party, an antique or vintage dessert table might just be the perfect finishing touch.
Dessert tables are elegant pieces essential for hosting both formal and casual gatherings. Also known as tilt-top tables or loo tables (named for the card game), these eye-catching furnishings make it easy to host large parties so that guests are not confined to a single space for the night. The top of a tilt-top table is typically hinged to a pedestal in the structure’s center so that its surface can be turned from a horizontal to a vertical position and parked in the corner of a living room or dining room. This gives it an advantage over a traditional side table and allows it to take up less space when it’s not in use.
Dessert tables are deliberately built small or narrow so that they are easy to maneuver. These compact tables were especially prominent in the 18th century in the United States and England where they regularly accompanied social interactions like tea drinking. During the early 1920s, the sterling-silver full tea service and tray designed by Tiffany & Co. set atop your dessert table might include a hot-water kettle on a stand, a coffeepot, a teapot, a creamer with a small lip spout, a waste bowl and a bowl for sugar, which the British were stirring into tea by the 1720s and ’30s.
Older dessert tables often feature intricate carvings and motifs, making them enduringly popular through the decades. Many tilt-top tables likewise have elaborate veneers for a decoration that can be viewed when they are tilted down and stored against a wall.
Find antique and vintage tilt-top tables and dessert tables in various styles and finishes on 1stDibs.