Designing for Entertaining
It’s not everyday you have 12 guests over for dinner, or a cocktail party for 20. This time of year it’s hard to get through the season without hosting a shindig at your home. But how do you make your interiors work for parties? We’ve got a few pieces that are must haves in making the transition between daily living and entertaining.
If you think a yearly family holiday gathering will be in your future duties, look for a dining room table with leaves. This is the easiest and most efficient way to turn your compact daily table into a long banquette. The distressed, French table above from Wisteria is perfect for nightly dinner in its smallest state at 43” x 43”, and can accommodate large dinner parties with all five leaves extending up to 131.75”. For safe storage keep your extra leaves in the closet, garage, or under the bed in the cardboard boxes they came in.
Set up a bar area away from the food table. This will keep guests rotating around the party space. A bar cart is the perfect piece for daily chic and nightly entertaining. Park it in your kitchen, living room, or dining room for liquor storage and organization, and wheel it out to center stage when you’ve got a house full of people. The rich wood bar cart from west elm (above) offers a sturdy and classic design.
Seating is always a concern when entertaining. To make sure you have enough seats at your fully extended dining table opt for a bench on one side and fill the other side and ends with your dining chairs, like the Pier 1 bench above. When you pop your table back to its daily size, keep the bench against a wall in a hallway or entry way.
Get creative with extra seating for cocktail parties and game nights. Poufs and stools are great pieces that work as ottomans on a daily basis and double as seating when accommodating for larger groups. Jonathan Adler’s Happy Chic pouf for J.C.Penney (above) has a great pattern and offers a comfortable perch.
When setting up for parties take all the chairs away from the table, and stage them around the room as extra seating. Group chairs in pairs or sets of threes to encourage conversation among seated guests. Keep your table floating the the room with all sides accessible so guests can move around the table, access it from all sides, and mingle as they do.
Have any other tips on furniture that transforms for entertaining? Share them with us.
-Alessandra
Alessandra Wood is Tastemaker’s resident design historian. Obsessed with everything vintage, she’s working on her PhD in design history. Animal prints, mid-century chrome lighting fixtures, and reclaimed wood furniture set her heart aflutter. Wondering how to judge the quality of of a piece of furniture, what to look for in buying an antique, how to date your finds, or which current trends have resurfaced from the past? Email your questions/comments to [email protected]
















