The Durbar Dining Suite

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The Durbar Dining Suite

The Durbar Dining Suite

A 7-piece dining set — one large rectangular table with six carved chairs — built entirely in solid dark-stained premium teak wood. The set carries the weight and formality of a colonial banquet room without being ornate for its own sake.

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Description

The tabletop is a wide, flat-planed slab with a clean rectangular form and a deeply stained walnut-brown finish that shows the wood grain clearly. The edge carries a carved border detail — a recurring floral and vines motif that wraps the perimeter. The base is the most distinctive element: a trestle-style pedestal with double columnar legs joined by a carved stretcher at the floor, giving the understructure a church-hall or refectory quality. 

The Chairs

The set has two chair types — the back chairs along the far side feature a fan-shell or palmette carving at the top rail, with an open fiddle-back splat beneath, a detail that reads directly from Queen Anne and Chippendale traditions filtered through Indian craftsmanship. The side chairs closer to the foreground have a different back treatment — a geometric lattice splat — suggesting the set may mix chair styles deliberately, a common practice in Anglo-Indian furniture commissions. All chairs have upright posture, solid wood seats, and straight tapered legs.

Carving & Craft

The carving throughout is hand-done. The motifs — shells, foliate scrolls, lattice openwork — are not stamped or routed but individually worked. This is one of the defining qualities of South and Central Indian wood working style that produced furniture for colonial households. 

Dimensions

Table: 200 × 95 cm (L × W), height around 76 cm. Seats 6 

Chairs: 45 cm seat width, 100 cm total back height. 

Colour

Deep walnut brown with warm amber undertones where light catches the grain. No two surfaces read identically — the stain sits differently on the tabletop, the turned legs, and the carved splats, giving the set a tonal depth that painted or veneered furniture cannot replicate.

 

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Established in 1979, we carry a legacy that we proudly unfold in front of you. Here tradition blends with creation, art blends with heritage, and finally, a whole new story is carved out in pure wood exclusively for you. 

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Description

The tabletop is a wide, flat-planed slab with a clean rectangular form and a deeply stained walnut-brown finish that shows the wood grain clearly. The edge carries a carved border detail — a recurring floral and vines motif that wraps the perimeter. The base is the most distinctive element: a trestle-style pedestal with double columnar legs joined by a carved stretcher at the floor, giving the understructure a church-hall or refectory quality. 

The Chairs

The set has two chair types — the back chairs along the far side feature a fan-shell or palmette carving at the top rail, with an open fiddle-back splat beneath, a detail that reads directly from Queen Anne and Chippendale traditions filtered through Indian craftsmanship. The side chairs closer to the foreground have a different back treatment — a geometric lattice splat — suggesting the set may mix chair styles deliberately, a common practice in Anglo-Indian furniture commissions. All chairs have upright posture, solid wood seats, and straight tapered legs.

Carving & Craft

The carving throughout is hand-done. The motifs — shells, foliate scrolls, lattice openwork — are not stamped or routed but individually worked. This is one of the defining qualities of South and Central Indian wood working style that produced furniture for colonial households. 

Dimensions

Table: 200 × 95 cm (L × W), height around 76 cm. Seats 6 

Chairs: 45 cm seat width, 100 cm total back height. 

Colour

Deep walnut brown with warm amber undertones where light catches the grain. No two surfaces read identically — the stain sits differently on the tabletop, the turned legs, and the carved splats, giving the set a tonal depth that painted or veneered furniture cannot replicate.