Late 19th Century Zinc-Top Garden Table













Late 19th Century Zinc-Top Garden Table
This late 19th-century American garden table refuses polish in favor of presence. The zinc top—softly dimpled, mottled, and unapologetically timeworn—reads like a working surface that has endured seasons, its patina earned, not applied. Below, a single generous drawer opens to reveal a tripartite interior, quietly practical, designed for tools, twine, and the rituals of use.
Flanking the drawer, two iron Eastlake-style handles add a note of graphic restraint—functional, but with just enough ornament to signal intention. The base sharpens the silhouette: four turned legs, assertive without weight, terminating in original casters that suggest movement as part of its design language.
The paint, a perfectly imperfect chippy white, hovers between erosion and beauty—impossible to replicate, entirely authentic. It moves easily between roles: potting table, console, even a small dining table. Labels feel beside the point. This is an object that has lived, adapted, and arrived exactly where it should be.
54.25 in. w x 33.25 in. D x 30.75 in. H
KNEE CLEARANCE: 23.25 in. H