Home Decor

5 Ways to Make Setting a Dinner Party Table So Much Easier

by:
December 22, 2015

Some things never change. In regard to setting the table, those would be the following: You need something to eat on, something to eat with, something to drink from, and a napkin to wipe it off with. Flowers are always a good idea. Bread on the left, drinks on the right (to remember the latter, simply make an "A-Ok sign" with both hands (your left hand forms a "b" and your right hand forms a "d").

After that, the rules get a bit fuzzy, which means there is a lot of room to experiment and create an environment that feels uniquely you. (Isn¹t that refreshing?) Here are some ideas to spark ideas:

Photo by James Ransom

1. Use your cupboards like a dress-up box. Put out place settings, trays, and bowls that stick to a particular material (brass, silver, ceramic) or color scheme so you can mix and match without worrying about clashing. Slip modern finds in with grandma's cut glass. It's okay—nay, chic!—if you use a hodgepodge of old silver.

Shop the Story

2. You really don't need all those forks, knives, and spoons—only set out what your guests will actually need for the evening, thereby cutting out clutter.

3. Similarly, for the serving dishes use items you have and don't worry about the utensils you don't have: Long salad tongs can also serve up spaghetti or slices of turkey with roasted vegetables. If you don't have ice cream bowls, use Champagne coups or tea cups (tea cups, it should be noted, also make excellent soup bowls, and their saucers nice salad plates if you're stacking courses.)

Photo by James Ransom

4. Keep part of the table minimal. Cloth napkins on a bare table say both chic and casual—and on the other end of the spectrum, plates placed directly on your fanciest tablecloth say laid-back elegant. And if formal is indeed what you're after, do the traditional but with a twist: On place cards, for instance, use people's nicknames, your (public) terms of endearment for them, or something that describes them in lieu of actual names.

5. Forgo the formal flowers. A vase of tightly-packed peonies or anemones has classic charm. Meanwhile, peculiar plants-balls of succulents, purple mini pineapples, or small cacti in lacquered or vintage pots‹are conversation starters. Blooms arranged au natural—even a little wild and looking as if they had come from the field rather than the supermarket—can be an alluring punctuation to a set of fine china.

And if you don't have the right vase, think outside it: Grab empty perfume bottles, graphically-interesting soup cans, water glasses, or salad bowls.

What's your favorite serving dish like? Tell us all about it in the comments.

Food52's Automagic Holiday Menu Maker
View Maker
Food52's Automagic Holiday Menu Maker

Choose your holiday adventure! Our Automagic Menu Maker is here to help.

View Maker

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

Jen Ford

Written by: Jen Ford

Jen Ford is the Editorial Director at kate spade new york and author of All in Good Taste, the brand's New York Times best-selling book on entertaining, wining and dining, manners and style in the 21st century. A graduate of the Central Saint Martins MA Fashion Journalism program, she was previously the Fashion News & Features Director at Lucky magazine, fashion features editor at Harper's Bazaar (heralding in its "entertaining with style" pages) and Wallpaper* magazine. Her work‹on topics ranging from evolving retail landscapes to the true cultural significance of "sex and the city”—has appeared in American Vogue, British Vogue, The New York Times, Financial Times,Time, and Elle. She’s a New Yorker by way of Seattle, Chengdu and London whose fondest memories always involve snippets of inspired conversations and thoughtful gestures. She has a "all dressed up and everywhere to go" personality that's at dire odds with a desire to stay in, watch french new wave films and eat takeout on fine china. She also has four fondue pots (all gifts), glassware for 50 ("just in case"), and can be spotted from anywhere in a crowded cocktail party by the black bow in her hair and swipe of red lipstick.

0 Comments