At Czar Floors, we transform your vision into functional art. Specializing in custom marble and wood inlay tabletops, each piece is handcrafted to reflect your unique story, style, and space. We believe in collaboration—bridging your imagination with our mastery to create truly bespoke furniture.
Utilizing advanced CNC and Waterjet technology combined with time-honored craftsmanship, we create intricate inlays, bold patterns, and personalized motifs. Simply bring us your sketch, photo, or idea—we bring your custom furniture to life.
Wood Tabletops
You can use custom or any of our standard floor wood medallions as a basis for tabletop design. Making a tabletop requires several important considerations to successfully use wood inlays in furniture. Depending on your project requirements, we offer several tabletop options:
- Unfinished, face-taped inlay with mesh-net backing (5/16" thick). This economical option is ideal for your furniture maker to embed into a custom base, apply finished edging, and complete the lacquered finish.
- Unfinished inlay, mounted on the plywood base of required thickness. Your furniture maker attaches it to the base. The marquetry can be routed into the base as well.
- Unfinished thick ready-made tabletop with finished edges. It can be mounted to another base or directly to legs.
A custom furniture maker approached us to develop an intricate pattern for a 90-inch table. This massive inlay featured a brass center element and multiple exotic woods. Due to its size, the inlay was made in segments to be precisely fitted by the maker onto their custom-built base. For the side apron, we crafted a very thin wood inlay border to allow for bending around the table's perimeter.
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90 inches custom wood tabletop with brass. -
Custom wooden tabletop and inlay apron.
This tabletop presented several challenges that our craftsman had to overcome:
Using Brass requires the inlay to be glued to plywood substrate. Due to its size - it was impossible to make the entire tabletop as a single piece. We had to make a center portion of the design with brass as a rigid round piece. The remaining part of the tabletop we had to make in segments that are precisely cut to form a uniform surface. While floor medallions are more forgiving, furniture requires a much higher precision with no visible seams and gaps.
The second issue was the flexible apron. We had to make the inlay border in thinner, 4-5mm wood to allow for bending around the perimeter. We had to calculate an exact pattern repeat to assure a balanced, simmetrical design.