The greatest barrier to placing a table in your kitchen is room. The kitchen is a functional space that has to be used for meal preparation. However cooking can take up a lot of room, and the more elaborate the dish, or the more people you are cooking for, the more complicated the process. For this reason, a table is not appropriate for every kitchen arrangement.
Luckily there are a few tricks you can use to squeeze a little bit more room out of this space. Using these ideas, it should be possible to fit pieces in the room that you never thought possible, and or to find alternatives that will work just as well.
One trick is to use the angles in the space to fit a table into an open nook. Round tables take up less space, relatively speaking, than square ones. This is because they don't have those four almost useless corners, jutting out into the space. However, if your kitchen is lucky enough to have a free corner, a square or rectangular shaped table can actually be beneficial, as it will be able to squeeze snugly into the space, thus eliminating three out of the four corners, leaving you with plenty of space. If you need more seated room, you can wait till the chef is done, and then just pull the table out from the wall. This will allow you to float a couple of extra chairs around the table centerpiece.
There are also a variety of smaller side pieces that can be used to fulfill the role of a kitchen table, without taking up quite as much space. Bistro tables are one option. Generally sized smaller than standard kitchen tables, bistro pieces are much easier to slide into an unused corner of the space.
Another thing that you can try are table alternatives. A lunch counter or bar area can often be set against a wall, or even affixed to the wall, and left hanging in the space. These are small and relatively out of the way, allowing you to have the same horizontal table space, without taking up all of the room that a full dining table entails.
This article was written by Jim Slate on behalf of PebbleZ.com's line of attractive kitchen tables. These pieces are hand made in the United States, and assembled using a variety of mosaic cut natural stone pieces. The line includes over 40 models to choose from, each available in a variety of large and small sizes, and various shapes.
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