Outdoor dining table series with elliptical top
A long outdoor dining table can change the way a terrace is used. Here, the shape does most of the work. The elliptical tabletop draws people inward, so even the longest version still feels like a place for conversation rather than a row of seats. The series is designed for outdoor dining, with four table formats and a clear emphasis on length, proportion and material choice.
An elliptical tabletop that keeps people close
The longest table in the series measures 620 cm by 125 cm and offers seating for sixteen. That scale is striking, but the ellipse softens the line. Instead of a rigid rectangle, the top narrows the distance between people at either end and makes it easier to speak across the table. On a large terrace, that difference matters. It turns a long outdoor table into a setting that still feels social, even when it stretches across a broad surface.
A second elliptical version measures 450 cm by 115 cm. It keeps the same visual idea, but in a format that takes up less room. Both of the largest tables use a powder-coated aluminum frame in anthracite or chalk. The frame reads as a thin structural line beneath the top, while the finish keeps the outline crisp against paving, planting and water in the surrounding images.
Material choices that stay visible in the light
The Dekton table top is offered in two colours: rem, a lighter tone, and kelya, a darker one. Each surface shows a veined pattern that becomes more noticeable in close-up views. The texture does not sit quietly in the background; it changes with the light and gives the long tabletop a marked surface presence. For a project built around a long outdoor table, that detail matters as much as the overall length.
The frame is fully made from coated aluminum, and the series expands that material into several tones. Alongside anthracite and chalk, the 320 cm version is also available in bronze. That smaller table measures 320 cm by 100 cm and is shown as both a dining and a high dining table at 95 cm high. The bronze option gives the shortest format a different reading, especially when it is paired with the lighter stone-like tabletop.
A series that moves from dining height to high dining
Lexx is not a single table but a family of four. The range includes a high dining table, which changes the posture around it without changing the language of the design. In the photographs, the higher setting works well with woven chairs and a terrace laid out beside water. The table keeps a long horizontal line, but the seating height lifts the scene just enough to make it feel more open.
The 95 cm high version is especially relevant for projects where the table needs to do more than host a meal. It becomes part dining table, part gathering point. The same elliptical tabletop logic carries through the different sizes, so the range stays recognisable even as the dimensions shift. That consistency is useful when one table is too large and another needs to fit a more contained outdoor layout.
Pairing the table with chairs
The Rob high dining chairs are shown as a natural match for the series. Their woven backs and light frames repeat the texture seen in the detail images, where the table base and chair structure sit close to one another. Other chairs from the Borek collection can also be chosen, which leaves room for a more personal composition around the outdoor dining table. The page does not rely on a full set; it leaves space for different seating choices while keeping the table as the main element.
What the photos make clear
The terrace settings in the images show more than the table itself. Large glass panels sit behind the dining area, and a pool edge or water feature runs close to the paving in several shots. That gives the series a strong horizontal frame: glass behind, water beside, table in the middle. A white parasol appears in one view, breaking the open sky and casting a softer line over the table and chairs. The result is measured, but never static.
Close-ups bring the project back to its surfaces. One detail image highlights the X-shaped table base; another shows the grain of the tabletop where the veining moves across a darker surface. These views make the table more legible as an object. The outdoor table is not only about size. It is also about how the base supports that length, how the edge reads against the light, and how the surface behaves at close range.
A long-table idea built for terraces with room to spare
Because the longest version reaches 620 cm, the series is clearly aimed at generous outdoor settings. The table needs space around it, but the shape helps it sit comfortably within that scale. The elliptical top means the ends do not feel detached from the middle, and the seating remains visually linked across the full length. In the context of a large terrace, that is what gives the design its particular rhythm.
Even the smaller formats keep that same logic. The 450 cm table offers a more compact answer without losing the long-table feeling, while the 320 cm version brings the idea down to a scale that can still work as a dining or high dining table. Across the series, the combination of elliptical tabletop, coated aluminum frame and Dekton table top keeps the language direct. It is a project built from proportion first, then from material.
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