LARGE WAREHOUSE COMPLEX
Monday - Saturday
9am-5pm,
BY APPOINTMENT
OPEN TO TRADE AND PUBLIC
Winslow Road
Granborough,
Bucks MK18 3NQ
BY APPOINTMENT
01296 532808
07887 834888















OUR REVIEWS ARE 

Nick Hewer (The Apprentice)

Hello Chris, Just wanted to say thank you. The chairs and table are absolutely beautiful - can’t stop looking at them and touching them! Sorry I couldn’t see you in person - I have a deadline for my masters coming up and I needed to do a day in the library! Also wanted to say I’ve shared your details on a closed FB group with 1.7k doctor mums who are interested in interior design and many are doing renovations. A few have already said they will make the trip based on the before & after pics, and I also connected with another client of yours who bought a large table and chairs!
Anyway- hope to do business again as we are really delighted. Thank you!
Best wishes, Anna

Wow! We absolutely love the table and chairs. Thank you so much. You and your team have done a fantastic job.
Thank you for delivering them today. The guys that delivered were lovely and did a brilliant job of installing it all too.
Janice
Read more Google Reviews
ANTIQUE EXTENDING DINING TABLES
With OVER 200 antique extending dining tables for sale in one location just north of London, Elisabath James are simply the largest professional stockist in the World of genuine antique tables.
Covering the Goergian, Regency and Victorian periods there is a huge variety of designs and formats of extending tables available in all sizes for 2 to 7 metres length. Our team of 11 in house professional restorers will also hand finihs your selected table to specification and this is INCLUDED IN OUR PRICES.
4 Metre Antique Dining Table - 13ft William IV Mahogany Extending Dining Table With Leaf Cabinet
Price: £8400
Circa: C.1835
Stock Code: E1587
Large Victorian Oak Table - 12ft Maples Design Oak Extending Dining Table To Seat Up To 16 People
Price: £4700
Circa: C.1890
Stock Code: E1579
Regency Pedestal Dining Table - Regency Revival Trip Pedestal Mahogany Demi Ended Extending Dining Table
Price: £2700
Circa: Early 1900's
Stock Code: E1576
Large Victorian Mahogany Dining Table - 5 metre Victorian Extending Dining Table To Seat Up To 20 People
Price: £8300
Circa: C.1870
Stock Code: E1573
Large Antique Oak Table - Late Victorian Arts & Crafts 10ft Oak Three Leaf Extending Dining Table Seat 12 People
Price: £2800
Circa: C1890
Stock Code: E1564
Large Antique Oak Dining Table - Late 19th Century Jacobean Carved 12ft Extending Oak Dining Table
Price: £4450
Circa: C.1890
Stock Code: E1559
Large Antique Dining Table - 10ft 3 Metre Sheraton Revival Mahogany Demi Ended Extending Dining Table
Price: £3300
Circa: C.1890
Stock Code: E1547
Large Antique Mahogany Dining Table - William IV period 3 Metre Mahogany Extending Dining Table With Faceted Legs
Price: £5600
Circa: C.1830
Stock Code: E1545
Large Georgian Antique Dining Table - Regency Period 10ft Gillows Leg Mahogany Extending Dining Table To Seat 12 People Comfortably
Price: £6300
Circa: C.1815
Stock Code: E1544
Large Antique Dining Table - Early Period Post Regency Mahogany 12ft Extending Dining Table To Seat 14 People Comfortably
Price: £7800
Circa: C.1830
Stock Code: E1539
Antique Dining Table - 8ft Victorian Mahogany Extending Dining Table With Reeded Legs
Price: £2350
Circa: C.1860
Stock Code: E1529
Antique Dining Table - Regency Mahogany Extending Breakfast Table On Single Pedestal To Seat Up to 10 People
Price: £2450
Circa: C.1820
Stock Code: E1528
11ft Victorian Oval End Extending Table - Mid Victorian Demi Ended Mahogany Dining Table With Reeded Tulip Legs
Price: £5200
Circa: C.1860
Stock Code: E1521
5 Metre Antique Oak Table - 16ft Victorian Round Extending Oak Table To Seat Up To 20 People
Price: £7900
Circa: C.1870
Stock Code: E1519
Large Victorian Dining Table - 10ft mid Victorian Mahogany Extending Dining Table With Three Leaves
Price: £4650
Circa: C.1870
Stock Code: E1516
ABOUT ANTIQUE EXTENDING DINING TABLES
There are many designs of antique extending tables dating back to the earliest draw leaf refectory tables whereby extension ends slid from under the tops of refectory tables form 16th & 17th Centuries. This method has continued through to today for more primitive builds in modern dining and kitchen tables. Also, many French farmhouse tables from 18th and 19th Centuries constructed in cherry and walnut had bread board extending ends, often in a base construction timber of beach or pine. At the later end of the 19th Century, during revival of the Jacobean, Tudor and Gothic oak refectory table, many draw leaf refectory tables were made again with extending ends.In terms of formal antique extending dining tables the first category of design is the Georgian D end sectional dining table with drop leaf centre section and leaves which were made during late George III period and into Sheraton era. The extending nature of these was fulfilled by simple gating legs and hinged lopers set under the tops. All bar a few were made in mahogany and at one time these early period tables were the most prized of all antique dining tables but today not all folk are agreeable with the multitude of legs underneath.
It was in the very early 19th Century Regency period that new extending table innovations came to the fore with famous designers Gillows, Wilkinson and Pocock all introducing techniques to make the extending of a formal dining table more ergonomic. Wilkinson patented his concertina or ‘scissor’ action table around 1810 and this was utilised within the forms of up scaled Pembroke and fold over tea table formats to create an extending dining table that literally closed away to a side table and it is believe that this innovation was initiated for the wealthy estate owners who were now taking quarters in the evolving merchant and economic centres of London, Liverpool, etc.. although rare we do have original late George III Regency examples surviving today.
Pocock’s patent utilise the breakfast table format of sabre leg pedestal base and a hub of runners above that incorporated a sash pulley system to automate both ends extending away to allow space for extension leaves for a table of length up to about 8ft. The wining design that prevailed however stemmed from Gillows who illustrated his ‘Imperial’ table that was formed as two console ends enclosing a group of box section runners that met in that met in the middle to form a single unit table that could be made at any length. We’ve had examples up to 20ft length in stock here but typically a 12ft table or so would be average length and the versatility with extension leaves allowed seating for 6 to 20 people from the same table.
This superior ergonomic and ease of construction ensured that the Gillows format was adopted throughout the 19th Century for extending dining tables and further evolved to become a single unit runner system table by late George IV and into William IV period. By Victorian times pretty much all antique extending dining tables surviving today would be of this strongly built runner system format, large turned legs and leaf system to extend. Mostly made in mahogany until 1880 when loss of the Colonies meant a reversion to use of English oak. It was Joseph Fitter of Birmingham that dominated the steel winding mechanism production form around 1850 with most tables being fitted thereafter and in the amateur antiques market the tables are often referred to incorrectly as ‘Joseph Fitter tables’.
The 1st World War interrupted production in the UK and with timber shortages and skilled labour lost the last of the quality hand made extending dining tables were made in the 1920s, often following the revival of George III Chippendale design with cabriole ball and claw legs.