Montreal Gazette

Want a lighter, brighter, fresher design? Try a white dining table

- ELIZABETH MAYHEW

Like fashion, decorating trends come in waves. One day, everyone wants a Sputnik light fixture in their foyer, and the next they want a Moroccan Beni Ourain-style rug on their living room floor. If my clients’ wishes are any indication of what the next trend will be, I’m predicting light and bright dining rooms are the upcoming craving du jour.

In the past few weeks, three clients have called wanting to lighten up their dining rooms. When asked why, they all said the same thing: They wanted these underused rooms to be happy, uplifting and airy. The dark wood furnishing­s they installed 10 or so years ago — the ones they used to think of as warm and cosy — now feel too serious and boardroom-like.

Their desire for change is partly driven by the fact that they all want to use their dining rooms more — particular­ly during the day — so a lighter, fresher design seems more attractive and inviting. I also attribute their change to today’s evergrowin­g influence of Scandinavi­an design, which favours lighter woods and paler colours.

Although there are several ways of giving my clients what they want — repainting the walls, changing the window treatments — I have urged them to start by making the biggest piece in the room, the dining table, white. I like white tables because they are crisp and clean and because every kind of china, glass, flower and linen (not to mention food!) looks good on them. The clients also have dark wood floors, so a white table will immediatel­y lighten a large horizontal swath of the room. And although white dining tables are plentifull­y available on the market, the clients, for various reasons, will be transformi­ng their existing tables.

One client had her walnut table custom-made — she loves the shape, but not the finish. The best solution is to have it sanded, stripped and lacquered. The process isn’t cheap: Harry C. Johnson & Son, a Maryland furniture restorer and refinisher, estimated refinishin­g her table would cost about US$2,800 and take 10 to 15 days. Of course, pricing varies based on a table’s size, condition and complexity, and factors such as whether it has leaves or not.

Another client’s dining table has a dark industrial concrete top that is heavy visually, and literally — the only way to get it out is to break it or have it craned out. The table is in an eighth-floor apartment, so there is no way to carry it out. To give the table a facelift, I enlisted the help of the client’s architects, New York-based Moschella/Roberts Architects, who suggested making a white Corian top six to 12 millimetre­s thick that will be adhered to the concrete with a special epoxy. They also proposed adding a thicker knife edge that tapers to a sharp point around the perimeter of the table to reduce the visual weight of the tabletop and conceal the concrete below.

In the last case, my client is not willing to commit to a white table. We settled on making a white tablecloth to the floor with an inverted pleat at each corner and then topping it with glass.

As for the dining chairs, my clients are keeping their existing chairs, and one client plans to recover the seats in a lighter fabric. We all agree: Their chairs will look fresher when paired with a white table, the chairs’ shapes will stand out more and the juxtaposit­ion will make the rooms look more interestin­g.

 ??  ?? Bungalow 5’s Norwalk Dining Table in white. Bungalow 5.
Bungalow 5’s Norwalk Dining Table in white. Bungalow 5.
 ?? BUNGALOW 5 ?? There’s no shortage of white dining tables on the market. Consider Bungalow 5’s bright Malta table.
BUNGALOW 5 There’s no shortage of white dining tables on the market. Consider Bungalow 5’s bright Malta table.

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