Table legs support a table and come with one or more legs, depending on the size of the table. Since the time of Ancient Rome and Europe, table legs continue to be carved, representing wild beasts, sphinxes or other figures.
Popular English period-styled table legs included Elizabethan and were huge, bulbous supports for tables; Jacobean styles were lighter and more comfortable with spiral supports; William and Mary introduced curved outlines, the trumpet leg and the inverted cup foot; Queen Anne, in walnut, characterized in cyma curves (double curves formed by joining a convex and concave line,) the rounded cabriole leg and the broken pediment.
Table legs support the very basic card table to the elaborate dining room table, as well as the popular coffee table, and boasts of richness and detail.
Styles have evolved to fit our generation as well, but the look of dark oak, hard maple or mahogany, still adds richness to any table.
We have the finest crafted table legs that are made of hard maple. From the Queen Anne to the Ram style, you’re sure to find what you’re looking for and with the right sizes.
One of the most popular styles of table legs came from the 1700’s. The Rams leg is seen in fine dining areas, living rooms, dens or as accent pieces for foyers. They are seen all over the world and are described as a long or short leg, with a carved ram’s head and curled up horns of a ram at the bottom that support a table. Today, the Rams leg for tables is still popular and is made of fine woods, such as walnut, maple, oak, cherry or mahogany and stained or lacquered for an elegant, shiny finish for any type of furniture you have.
The Rams table legs are made of a hard maple and ready to stain any color you desire. They can either be solid or long and feminine, depending on your table and desired size. For a kitchen
The Ram’s head style was first introduced in King Louis the XVI’s, period, from 1774-1792. In King Louis style, exquisite marquetry and floral designs were banded by geometrical trims and circumscribed by oval or round medallions.
Sculptures of animals such as the eagle, dolphin or rams heads were used and were very popular architecture that brought uniqueness and symbolism into furniture, such as billiard tables, chairs and dining room tables.

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