Made by D'Hierro The hardest-working surface in the house. Caracole's cocktail tables run from stone-topped minimalism to sculptural metalwork — jewelry for the center of the room.
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Made by D'Hierro
The math: two-thirds the sofa's length, 1–2" below its seat height, and 16–18" of walking gap. Round and oval tops earn their keep in sectional layouts and homes with small children; rectangles suit long sofas and formal rooms.
Material sets the mood — stone and ceramic tops shrug off drinks but want pads under rough ceramics; wood brings warmth and forgives nothing; glass disappears in small rooms but shows every fingerprint; metal bases split the difference. Many Caracole pieces mix two or three of these in one silhouette, which is exactly why they read as jewelry for the room.
Flank with side tables at every seat, or anchor the whole arrangement around the sofa first. See composed examples in Shop the Room.
Ninety-five tables from about $520 to $6,100 — sculptural Caracole cocktail tables across stone, metal, and mixed materials, plus a few benchmade Costantini pieces. The finishing move is the pairing: matched or deliberately mismatched side tables at the sofa's ends complete the composition.
The hands behind these rooms also forge the architecture — entry doors, steel window walls, stair railings — and our own forged-iron furniture. One Dallas shop; renovating and furnishing happen here together.