Table Guide
The dining table is the
heart of the home.
The dining table is one of the pieces of furniture you spend the most time with at home. Carefully selecting it from multiple perspectives—shape, material, size, and tabletop appearance—is the first step to ensuring you cherish and use it for a long time.
Calculate from your space
Before placing a table, the priority is to secure a "traffic line." Without at least 80-90cm of clearance on all four sides of the table, pulling out chairs and people moving around will feel cramped. The maximum size of table you can choose is the room's dimensions minus this clearance.
- Measure the length and width of the space where the table will be placed.
- The maximum size is the measurement minus 80-90cm from each side.
- Calculate including the depth when chairs are pulled out.
- Check the delivery route (entrance, hallway, door width) in advance.
Shape interacts with room layout
There's a compatibility between the shape of the table and the shape of the room. Square or round tabletops naturally fit into square rooms, and rectangular tables fit into rectangular rooms. On the other hand, deliberately contrasting them can create rhythm in the space. The choice depends on the "mood" of the space.
"Round tables with no sharp edges are flexible enough for small dining rooms and spaces with complex traffic patterns."
Decide after imagining how you'll use it
Will it be used for daily meals, or mainly for weekend home parties? The required functions and materials change depending on how the table is used. For daily use, prioritize durability and ease of maintenance; for frequent guests, prioritize seating capacity and presence.
- Daily use: prioritize materials resistant to scratches, heat, and water (wood, marble).
- Frequent guests: a tabletop with ample seating and presence.
- Combined use (work & dining): check the balance of tabletop area and height.
- Homes with children/pets: light colors and matte finishes show dirt easily.
Tabletop material creates the table's personality
coconordic tables come in two main types of tabletops: wood and marble. Wood offers warmth and changes over time, while marble possesses a unique gravitas and one-of-a-kind appearance. Both are "living" materials that you'll grow to love more the longer you keep them.
- Wooden tabletop: warm texture, ages beautifully even with scratches.
- Marble tabletop: gravitas and luxury, with unique veining as its charm.
- Marble requires care with heat and acid (coasters and pot holders recommended).
- Wood lasts longer with regular oil maintenance.
Price range and its meaning
The price of coconordic tables is determined by the tabletop material, leg design, and size. Marble tabletop models are priced to reflect the cost of sourcing and processing the stone. As furniture you'll use for a long time, we recommend choosing based on the value of the material and construction.
WOOD TOP
¥130,000〜
JI (Round) ¥130,000
Fed (Round) ¥158,000
Marst (Long) ¥228,000
nor (Long) ¥270,000
Teramo (Long) ¥290,000
Vemb (Long) ¥363,000
MARBLE TOP / PREMIUM
¥530,000〜
Amalfi (Round/Marble) ¥530,000
nor (Round/Marble) ¥530,000
Teramo (Round) ¥530,000
Nemo (Long) ¥530,000
Teramo (Long/Marble) ¥822,800
Vemb (Long/Marble) ¥822,800
Models from the same series that offer both wooden and marble tabletops (Teramo, nor, Vemb) allow you to choose the material according to your budget. If you're considering upgrading to marble in the future, choosing models from the same series with common leg designs will help achieve overall balance.