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Tray Tables

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Tray Tables For Sale
Stephane Parmentier, "Linate", Tray Table, France, 2015
Located in New York, NY
A marble and Emperor lava tray table from Stephane Parmentier's Mercury collection Limited edition of 12 + 3 Third image presenting it next to a ...
Category

2010s French Tray Tables

Materials

Lava, Marble

Set of Four Sputnik Tripod Tables
Located in Hanover, MA
Set of four 1950s Sputnik snack tables made by Excel Mfg. Muncie, IN. These are new old stock with the original box and packaging. Never used. Original instruction labels on each top...
Category

1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Tray Tables

Materials

Brass, Steel

Shelf with Bronze Gallery by Baguès
Located in Paris, FR
Bibus with spacer and amounts guilloche bronze mirrored tray and oxidized silver, good condition, circa 1950-1970
Category

20th Century French Tray Tables

Materials

Bronze

Porcelain Tray Table
Located in Asheville, NC
Chinese export porcelain with faux cloisonné top with famille rose motif. The tray is removable and has wonderfully decorative cast bronze handl...
Category

18th Century and Earlier Chinese Antique Tray Tables

Materials

Bronze, Gold Leaf

Antique and Vintage Tray Tables

The popularity of antique and vintage tray tables owes mostly to the 1950s, when the first TV dinners made their way into the freezers of American kitchens.

At a time when televisions were increasingly becoming fixtures in the living rooms of most homes in the United States, the tray table was impossibly convenient. With a deft merging of function and style, the table, positioned in front of your sofa or plush armchair, was a place to rest your Swanson-brand TV dinner, a compartmentalized supper issued on a disposable tray that required minimal preparation. The technological advances of the mid-century kitchen included programmable ovens, so TV dinners were quick and easy, particularly when home-cooked meals were out of the question.

When one had finished the last bite of this square meal, which was packed into sections that assumed various geometric shapes in their own partitioned aluminum tray, the tray table could be easily folded up and tucked away until needed again.

Eventually, designers took to exploring iterations of the widely loved tray table that would better suit household needs. Once a simple, foldable furnishing that was confined to use at mealtime, tray tables are now somewhat of a budget-friendly design staple for many households. Today, tray tables are as versatile as ever, and such a wide range has been manufactured over the years that you’re likely to find a good fit no matter what your furniture style preferences might be.

Tray tables are used as side tables, nightstands, a bar tray when your space won’t accommodate that handsome vintage bar cart you’ve been looking for and desks, particularly as many of us are working from home and especially when a modest-sized apartment won’t allow for larger tables.

Tray tables vary in style, shape and size. When looking for a tray table, you should measure accordingly and ensure that wherever it will land in your space there will be room around the table to allow for easy movement.

On 1stDibs, find a collection of antique and vintage tray tables that includes mid-century modern tray tables, Art Deco versions and more.

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