stone dining tables

stone dining tables
41 Items
BEST SELLER
BEST SELLER
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BEST SELLER
BEST SELLER
BEST SELLER
BEST SELLER
Arcen 84" Dining Table
Sale
$1,799
$1,949
BEST SELLER
Rolf 72" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,199
$1,799
Silas 48" Dining Table
Clearance
$999
$1,499
Berit 47" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,199
$1,699
Rolf 72" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,299
$1,799
Rolf 84" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,599
$1,899
Silas 85" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,099
$1,849
Estelle 42" Dining Table
Sale
$1,299
$1,399
Eliseo 84" Dining Table
Sale
$1,799
$1,999
Casimir 84" Dining Table
Clearance
$1,799
$2,399

Modern Stone Dining Tables for Daily Meals and Hosting

A stone dining table brings visual weight, texture, and everyday practicality to the center of your dining space. Hernest's collection includes compact round tables for apartments and breakfast corners, 47"–48" options for everyday family meals, and larger 72"–84" designs for open dining rooms and weekend hosting.


Choose from stone-look tops, travertine-textured surfaces, oval silhouettes, round profiles, and sculptural bases that help the table feel intentional from every angle. Whether you need a smaller dining setup or a statement table for shared meals, this category helps you compare size, shape, finish, and seating comfort before you buy.



Choose a Size That Fits the Room Before the Guest List


Start with the space, not just the number of seats. A 31" or 42" stone dining table works well in a breakfast nook, apartment kitchen, or two-person dining corner, while 47"–48" round tables give small households more usable surface without sharp corners. For open dining rooms, 72" and 84" tables offer better serving space and room for guests. If you are still comparing shapes, browse more dining tables or narrow the layout with oval dining tables.



Use Stone Texture as the Visual Anchor


Stone tops and travertine-textured finishes are useful when the dining area needs more presence than a plain wood table can provide. The surface pattern adds movement, while pedestal and sculptural bases keep the table looking finished in open-plan rooms where every side is visible. For a softer look, pair a stone top with warm wood tones or upholstered seating; for a sharper modern room, choose slim chairs and a defined base. Compare center-base silhouettes in pedestal dining tables and complete the setup with dining chairs.



Plan the Dining Zone Around Seating and Storage


A stone dining table can become the main gathering point, but the surrounding pieces decide how well the room works day to day. Choose chair widths that slide in cleanly around pedestal bases, and leave enough walking room for serving, cleaning, and guests moving behind seated diners. If you host often, keep plates, linens, and glassware off the tabletop with nearby storage. Build a more complete dining area with sideboards and credenzas or add drink and serving storage with bar cabinets.

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