The oval table solves a problem that rectangular tables create and round tables can’t quite fix. It seats more people than its footprint suggests, it removes the awkward hierarchy of ends, and it moves through a room without snagging on corners or making a narrow dining space feel like a corridor. We think it is the most overlooked shape in dining furniture and we’ve never understood why it took so long to become the obvious choice.

What we’ve been looking for here goes beyond shape. The base matters enormously. A pedestal gives you leg room for six without the shuffle. A four legged oval can feel clumsy if it isn’t well proportioned. Materials matter too because a table that seats your family every night needs to age well, not just photograph well.

These are the ones that justify the floor space they take up, that feel considered rather than defaulted to, and that will still look right in ten years. The shape rewards the thought.