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If you can swing it, why not opt for a new dining table with a built-in lazy Susan? This pillar table cuts a chic profile, and its center lazy Susan is a generous 23 inches in width.
Legend–er, “history”–has it that Thomas Jefferson designed the first Lazy Susan when his daughter complained about being served last. But dumbwaiters, as they were originally called, only ...
Cut the boards for the large and small Lazy Susan discs. For my 18- and 10-inch-diameter circles, I cut my maple board into four 19-inch lengths for the top and three 11-inch lengths for the bottom.
Sixty years ago, Chinese food got a makeover. Its new look—in American restaurants, at least—revolved around a single piece of furniture, the “Lazy Susan” rotating table. Through the 1950s ...
The simple rotating serving tray has gone by many names over the years: dumbwaiter, butler’s assistant and, most famously, lazy Susan. Accounts of its origins are similarly varied: Some say it ...
This table goes by its name, Lazy Susan. As you and your friends enjoy a good talk at a restaurant, they unintentionally interrupt by requesting to pass the salt.
A friend recently started making a lazy Susan a mainstay on their dining room table, and I was struck by how smart the idea was; not only did their checkerboard lazy Susan look cool on the table with ...