Skip to content
Welcome To Our Store.
100,000+ Products for Home, Medical, Office & Classroom Needs
Search

5 Statement Dining & Coffee Tables That Turn Wood Into Art

5 Statement Dining & Coffee Tables That Turn Wood Into Art
David Sandel|
5 Statement Dining & Coffee Tables That Turn Wood Into Art
Furniture Guide

5 statement tables that turn wood into art

A closer look at five handcrafted solid-wood and epoxy-resin tables from Smart Supply Deals — each one built around the natural grain, knots, and live edges of real timber, so no two pieces ever look quite the same.

01

Round Dining Table with Solid Wood Drum Pedestal Base

Round dining table with a solid wood drum pedestal base
Solid wood tabletop on a cylindrical drum pedestal — no corner legs.

The photo says it all: a wide, perfectly round tabletop in warm, honey-toned solid wood sits atop a solid cylindrical "drum" pedestal instead of the usual four-leg design. The tight, continuous grain running around the base gives it a sculptural, almost architectural look, while the tabletop itself shows the kind of natural color variation you only get from real hardwood — not veneer.

Why it stands out

  • No corner legs means more knee room and easier seating for larger groups
  • The drum base anchors the room with a bold, minimal silhouette that works in both modern and farmhouse-style dining rooms
  • Available in diameters from 48" up to 71", scaling from a cozy breakfast nook to a full dinner-party table
  • Handcrafted from a unique slab, so no two tables are exactly alike
From $6,750.00
02

Round Epoxy Resin Table with Wooden Tulip Base (Walnut)

Round epoxy resin table with a wooden tulip base made of walnut
Smoked resin tabletop on a flared walnut tulip pedestal.

This one leans into contrast. The tabletop combines rich, dark walnut with a smoky, semi-translucent resin pour that catches the light differently depending on the angle, giving the surface real depth instead of a flat, uniform finish. It sits on a flared, tulip-shaped wooden pedestal that echoes the classic mid-century "tulip table" silhouette — but rendered in solid walnut instead of molded plastic or metal.

Why it stands out

  • The tulip base is a design statement on its own, visually lighter than a traditional four-leg table
  • Smoked resin tone pairs beautifully with darker dining chairs and warm lighting
  • Fully customizable — choose your size (43" to 71") and resin finish
  • A true conversation-starter centerpiece for a modern dining room
From $4,750.00
03

Resin Coffee Table with Walnut Legs

Resin coffee table with walnut legs
A smoked-resin river runs through the slab, framed by slim walnut legs.

Scaled down for the living room, this coffee table follows the same "river table" concept: a smoked-resin channel winds through the wood slab like a vein, mimicking the look of flowing water frozen in place. Four slim, tapered walnut legs keep the piece visually light so it doesn't overwhelm a smaller seating area.

Why it stands out

  • The resin "river" pattern is unique to each table, following the natural crack or seam in the wood slab
  • Slim walnut legs in your choice of gold, silver, antiqued brass, or original walnut finish
  • Five size options, from a compact 27"×39" up to a generous 35"×59"
  • A lower-commitment way to bring the resin-and-wood aesthetic into your home
From $3,300.00
04

Natural Epoxy Side Dining Table — Linden Wood, Aluminum Legs

Natural epoxy side dining table made of linden wood with aluminum legs
Long-format live-edge tabletop on sleek gold aluminum legs.

This is the long-format option, built for a full dining room rather than a small table for two. The tabletop uses pale, natural linden wood with its own live-edge silhouette, filled in with clear or lightly tinted epoxy resin so the wood grain stays the star. Rather than wood legs, it rests on sleek metal legs — shown here in a gold finish — giving the whole piece a lighter, more contemporary stance.

Why it stands out

  • Patented all-aluminum legs add extra stability under a long tabletop
  • Leg finish options include gold, black, silver, and rose gold to match your existing decor
  • Scales from a 6-seat 35"×66" table up to a grand 47"×130" for large gatherings
  • Live-edge resin sides keep the organic silhouette of the original wood slab visible from every angle
From $6,450.00
05

Solid Linden Wood Natural-Look Epoxy Resin Side Dining Table

Solid linden wood natural look epoxy resin side dining table
Clear resin fill keeps the bark-edged silhouette of the slab intact.

The most rustic-leaning piece in the lineup, this table pairs light linden wood with a clear, glass-like resin fill that keeps the bark-edged silhouette of the original slab intact. Unlike the aluminum-leg version above, this table stands on solid wood legs, giving it a warmer, more traditional feel that suits farmhouse and organic-modern interiors alike.

Why it stands out

  • Solid wood legs (black, silver, gold, or original walnut) for a heavier, more grounded look
  • Clear resin lets the natural bark-edge and grain of the linden slab take center stage
  • 13 size combinations, from a 31"×63" table up to a banquet-length 43"×113"
  • Handcrafted to order for a genuinely unique centerpiece, not a mass-produced look-alike
From $4,399.00

Which one should you choose?

Want a classic, no-fuss round table for everyday dinners?
Go with the Drum Pedestal Table — solid wood, no resin, and easiest to match with any chair style.
Want a dramatic centerpiece for a modern dining room?
The Tulip Base Resin Table delivers the most visual drama for a round table.
Just need a coffee table, not a full dining set?
The Resin Coffee Table with Walnut Legs brings the same aesthetic at a smaller scale and price point.
Hosting large groups regularly?
Either long side table works — choose aluminum legs for a sleeker base, or solid wood legs for something warmer and more traditional.

All five pieces are handmade to order, which means production takes roughly 4–7 weeks, but each one ships free across the continental US once it's ready. Because every slab of wood is different, no two tables — even of the same design — will ever be perfectly identical, which is really the whole point.

Back to blog
you might like