LARGE WAREHOUSE COMPLEX
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BY APPOINTMENT
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Winslow Road
Granborough,
Bucks MK18 3NQ
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01296 532808
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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 PEDESTAL DINING TABLES
Elisabeth James hold AROUND 50 round circular antique pedestal dining tables in stock and typically OVER 40 Regency and Georgian long pedestal and pillar extending dining tables in sizes from 3, 4, 5 and up to 7 metres long. With demi end and D end shaped in mahogany and some with crossbandings there would always be a huge choice for sale at our Antique Furniture Warehouse.
If the perfect pedestal table is not listed in our selction below please contact us as always many more in stock.
3 Metre Regency Revival Pedestal Table - 10ft Demi Ended Mahogany And Crossbanded Regency Pedestal Dining
Price: £2800
Circa: Mid 1900's
Stock Code: E1612
French Extending Pedestal Dining Table - 11ft 19th Century Archetectural Pedestal Base Extending Table To Seat 14 People
Price: £5700
Circa: C.1870
Stock Code: E1610
Antique Regency Twin Pedestal Table - Georgian Revival Mahogany Twin Pedestal Dining Table To Seat 10 Comfortably
Price: £2700
Circa: C.1930
Stock Code: E1604
Regency Pedestal Dining table - Large Regency Revival Triple Pedestal Mahogany Dining Table To Seat 14 People
Price: £3900
Circa: Early 1900's
Stock Code: E1602
Large 4 Metre Regency Table - Regency Revival 12ft Mahogany Demi Ended Pedestal Based Extending Dining Table
Price: £5900
Circa: C.1900
Stock Code: E1578
Regency Pedestal Dining Table - Regency Revival Trip Pedestal Mahogany Demi Ended Extending Dining Table
Price: £2700
Circa: Early 1900's
Stock Code: E1576
Large Regency Pedestal Table - 14ft Regency Quadruple Pedestal Mahogany Dining Table To Seat up to 18 people
Price: £7900
Circa: C1830 & later
Stock Code: E1568
Victorian Mahogany Round End Table - Late 19th Century Mahogany Oval Formed Pedestal Based Extending Table With Leaf Keep
Price: £4800
Circa: C1870
Stock Code: E1567
Large Antique Georgian Table - Regency Revival Twin Pedestal Extending Mahogany Dining Table To Seat 12 People
Price: £3650
Circa: C.1900
Stock Code: E1561
ABOUT ANTIQUE PEDESTAL DINING TABLES
Antique Pedestal Dining TablesWhen considering the pillar or pedestal dining table one immediately imagines the classic Regency pedestal tables made in the early 19th Century during late George III period into George IV. However there have been many table formats that incorporating the pedestal bases which most commonly are formed with a turned stem which is supported by a sabre or cabriole formed legs. These pedestal bases were fist seen in the George II Chippendale period on wine tables, tea tables and breakfast tables with, at that time, most commonly cabriole pad foot bases and sometimes with an eagle or lions paw relief carved. During the Sheraton period the design became lighter with more square formed legs, often with boxwood line inlays and more geometric curvature.
For dining size the first that could be considered are the late 18th Century/early 19th Century rectangular breakfast tables which were all on pedestal bases with fine sabre legs, often reeded and terminating in brass toe casters. If a round breakfast table then usually three sabre legs and if rectangular then four. It is believed that this breakfast table format with pedestal base inspired the classic Regency period pedestal dining table that quite simply was formed from a number of tops on pedestal bases that could be joined with extension leaves suspended between. The period of the production as fashion for these tables was very brief as it coincided with the innovations of Gillows, Wilkinson, Pocock, etc. developing far more versatile extending systems. Therefore very few genuine Regency pedestal dining tables survive from the 1800 to 1825 period today.
During the late Regency and into William Iv period the pedestal base tables for both breakfast table and dining table formats evolved to a much heavier build design. The stems or pillar more so became columns in round, faceted and often with carved collets or ring work. These columns met platform bases, again of varying shapes which were supported on scroll or lions paw feet. Also the new runner system format of extending a dining table was incorporated with pedestal bases to form a hybrid format which on first look may be a breakfast table, often round, but could then extend with the runners, with the pedestal base fixed or splitting to form larger dining tables with the bases offering end support. Indeed this split pedestal base format continued into the late 19th Century with, although rare, tables very much following the Gothic, Jacobean and Arts & Crafts in oak.
Alongside this adoption of the extending pedestal base tables in the late 19th Century was a Regency revival of the classic mahogany pedestal dining table and this we consider to be due to the loss of the Colonies and shortage of mahogany. Quite simply the Regency pedestal table takes less timber than any other construction design so timber shortage somewhat dictated. Until the 1930’s pretty much all formal mahogany table commissioned followed the Regency Revival pedestal design.
Through the 20th Century and to modern day, again due to shortage or trade embargo of mahogany, most pedestal dining tables follow the light build of the Regency design.pedestal bases with slender tops. The modern reproduction ‘style’ tables are veneered on to plywood and imported from factories in the Far East. Unfortunately, these reproduction tables have now infiltrated the antique market via companies claiming to be ‘antique dining table specialists’ who have flooded the market with Regency ‘style’ pedestal tables but list them in antique categories with misleading description of ‘in good condition’, etc. to catch unsuspecting buyers. All over Ebay you will see long listings of ‘Regency pedestal table’ from these companies and rarely will they state the word ‘reproduction’. Other clues to these fake tables are the inlays, walnut and oak veneer decoration which was never used historically. All antique pedestal design Regency dining tables are in solid mahogany with only the round centre piec breakast type tables using decorative veneer.