How to build a dining table

how to build a dining table
how to build a dining table


How to Build a Dining Table (The Reclaimed Way)

So you want to build a real table—not some wobbly IKEA thing—but a proper wood table that’ll last generations. Here’s how we do it, step-by-step:


1. Choose Your Wood

  • Go for hardwood: Black Walnut, White Oak, Maple, or Ash are all great.
  • Buy rough-sawn lumber from a hardwood supplier, not a big box store. Get boards that are 6–10″ wide and 1.75–2″ thick.

Tip: Let your wood acclimate to your space for a few days before you start building.


2. Mill the Wood

You’ll need a jointer, planer, and table saw.

  • Joint one face flat, then joint one edge.
  • Run the board through a planer to get uniform thickness.
  • Rip to width on the table saw.
  • Square up the ends.

No jointer or planer? Buy S4S lumber (surfaced on 4 sides) and skip this step—but expect to pay more.


3. Glue Up the Top

  • Lay out your boards to get the best grain match.
  • Use wood glue and bar clamps to glue the boards edge-to-edge.
  • Clamp evenly and wipe off squeeze-out.
  • Let it dry overnight, then scrape or sand flush.

Optional: Use biscuits or dominos to help with alignment, but wood glue alone is plenty strong.


4. Sand the Top

  • Use an orbital sander: 80 grit → 120 → 180 → 220.
  • Sand the edges and corners to soften them.

Take your time here—this is what people will see and touch every day.


5. Build the Base

Choose your style: trestle, X-base, or straight legs. Wood or steel both work.

For a simple wood base:

  • Use 4x4s or laminated 2x4s for legs.
  • Add horizontal stretchers to keep it stable.
  • Pocket screws, lag bolts, or mortise-and-tenon joinery all work, depending on your tools.

Make sure it’s square. Measure diagonals and use clamps.


6. Attach the Base

  • Use figure-8 fasteners, Z-clips, or slotted brackets to allow for wood movement.
  • Never screw the base directly into the top without accounting for expansion/shrinkage.

7. Finish It

  • Wipe off all dust.
  • Apply a durable finish like oil-based polyurethane, hardwax oil, or a conversion varnish.
  • Apply 2–3 coats, sanding lightly between coats.

We love Rubio Monocoat for a natural, matte look. It’s easy to repair later too.


8. Enjoy the Heck Out of It

You built a real table—solid, heavy, beautiful. It’ll get scratched and dinged over time, and that’s part of the story.


Tools You’ll Need (Minimum):

  • Orbital sander
  • Clamps (lots of them)
  • Drill/driver
  • Circular saw (if no table saw)
  • Wood glue
  • Tape measure/square

Nice to Have:

  • Jointer + Planer
  • Table saw
  • Router for edge profiles
  • Biscuit joiner or domino

www.reclaimedcl.com

How to build a dining table.