What "Fruitwood Parsons table – Limoges Woodtone" usually describes
In WordPress-era appraisal notes, this keyword shows up as: fruitwood Parsons table, Limoges Woodtone, and Drexel Furniture, with a set described as table + six chairs + two leaves + a custom table cover. That combination is common for late-20th-century American dining furniture (often 1970s–1990s), where a simple Parsons silhouette is paired with a warm, amber "fruitwood" finish.
Important nuance: "fruitwood" in furniture listings is often a finish color rather than a botanical species. It can look like cherry/maple/pear in tone, but the underlying wood might be birch, maple, beech, alder, or even veneered hardwood. The goal of an appraisal is to document (1) maker, (2) construction quality, (3) completeness, and (4) condition in a way that matches reliable market comps.
Is "Limoges Woodtone" a maker, a line, or a finish?
Collectors often associate the word Limoges with French porcelain, but in the context of a dining room set it is more likely one of the following:
- A model or collection name used by a U.S. maker or retailer (sometimes printed on paper labels).
- A finish designation ("woodtone" frequently appears as a stain/finish descriptor rather than a wood species).
- A family nickname for the set that survived in estate paperwork even after labels were lost.
The fastest way to resolve it is to document the underside (table frame + leaf mechanism) and the chairs’ construction so the item can be matched to catalog photos or confirmed manufacturing labels.
Checklist: how to confirm Drexel attribution
Legacy copy for this keyword suggests the set was "most likely" from Drexel (sometimes described as a Drexel Heritage collection). Attribution is plausible, but verification comes from markings and build details:
- Look for labels. Check under the table top, on the apron, on the underside of leaves, and under chair seats for paper labels, burned stamps, or metal plaques.
- Record all numbers. Style numbers, finish codes, and inspector stamps are often the key to matching a catalog entry.
- Photograph leaf hardware. Drexel-era extension hardware is usually robust; cheap replacements can indicate later parts or repair.
- Assess joinery. Chairs with dowel-and-screw repairs or loose corner blocks can reduce value even when the table is excellent.
What makes a "large size" Parsons set more valuable
Parsons tables look simple, but the market prices them based on practical usability and perceived build quality. For a set described as large with two leaves and six chairs, the biggest value drivers are:
- Extension capacity. A table that seats 6 closed and 8–10 with leaves has stronger demand than a 4-seat version.
- Leaf fit and color match. Leaves that match the top (color, sheen, grain direction) signal a complete original set.
- Chair comfort + stability. Wobble, loose joints, or sagging seats can drop buyer interest quickly.
- Finish condition. "Woodtone" finishes often show water rings and heat hazing; light wear is acceptable, but flaking or heavy refinishing can lower value.
- Brand confidence. A confirmed Drexel/Drexel Heritage label generally outperforms unmarked furniture with similar styling.
Condition notes to capture (what appraisers look for)
Before you price, do a quick "use test" like a buyer would: open the table, insert leaves, sit in multiple chairs, and check for movement. Then document:
- Top surface: rings, scratches, veneer bubbles (if veneered), and edge dings.
- Apron + legs: corner splits, repaired breaks, and scuffed edges from chairs.
- Leaf hardware: stripped screws, missing alignment pins, or aftermarket slides.
- Chairs: joint looseness, replaced stretchers, torn upholstery, foam collapse, or stain odors.
- Accessories: leaf storage, table pads/covers, and receipts (these help a sale, even if they don’t add much appraised value).
Value ranges: auction vs private sale vs insurance
Dining sets are bulky. That means the same set can sell very differently depending on whether a buyer must arrange local pickup (auction) or receives delivery/selection help (retail). A practical way to think about value is:
| Market context | Typical range | What moves it up |
|---|---|---|
| Local auction (hammer) | 50–00 | Confirmed maker, clean finish, leaves present, chairs tight, strong local attendance. |
| Private sale / local dealer | 00–,000 | Complete 6-chair set, attractive fruitwood tone, ready-to-use upholstery, good photos + measurements. |
| Insurance replacement (retail) | ,500–,000+ | Documented maker/collection, professional cleaning/refinish, delivery, and comparable retail listings. |
If your set is truly a Drexel dining suite with two original leaves and stable chairs, a working private-sale value often lands around ,000–,800 in many U.S. markets (condition-dependent). If labels are missing and chairs need work, values can fall toward the lower end.
Recent auction comparables (examples)
The following comps come from auction datasets and illustrate how Parsons-style tables and Drexel-branded dining furniture show up in the market. They are not identical to your exact set, but they help anchor expectations.
| Auction house | Date & lot | Hammer price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ahlers & Ogletree Inc. | Oct 9, 2024 · Lot 369 | ,100 | Drexel Heritage Heirloom dining table with two leaves (brand-confirmed comp; different form/wood but relevant demand signal). |
| Simpson Galleries, LLC | Jun 12, 2021 · Lot 360 | 75 | Vintage Lane walnut parquetry Parsons table, signed 1970 (smaller, table-only reference for Parsons-form pricing). |
| Uniques & Antiques | Dec 2, 2024 · Lot 449 | 50 | Laminate Parsons writing desk + side cabinets (illustrates how material quality shifts Parsons pricing). |
How to sell this type of dining set without leaving money behind
- Sell the completeness. Photograph all six chairs, both leaves, and the table cover/pads together. Buyers pay for a ready-to-host setup.
- Measure and show scale. Include width, depth, height, and each leaf’s width. A single photo with a tape measure prevents lowballing.
- Stage, don’t over-style. Clear tabletop shots under daylight and a simple dining-room setting are enough.
- Disclose repairs honestly. Tightened joints are fine; hidden glue repairs become returns and disputes.
- Choose the right channel. For heavy sets, local pickup marketplaces can outperform national platforms once shipping is considered.
Search variations collectors ask
Readers often Google:
- Limoges Woodtone dining table set value
- fruitwood parsons dining table with 2 leaves appraisal
- how to identify Drexel Heritage dining table labels
- Drexel Talavera dining set value 6 chairs
- parsons table leaf mechanism troubleshooting
- what wood is called fruitwood in furniture listings
- best way to sell a dining table set locally
- insurance replacement value for Drexel dining table
Each question is answered in the valuation guide above.
Key takeaways
- "Fruitwood" is often a finish color, not a confirmed species—document grain and underside construction.
- Value is driven by completeness (6 chairs + 2 leaves), leaf fit, chair stability, and finish condition.
- Drexel attribution matters, but labels/stamps and hardware details are what make it credible.
- Expect lower auction outcomes for bulky dining sets; private-sale and insurance values typically run higher.
References
- Legacy WordPress appraisal notes (content migrated and expanded; resources.appraisily.com images unavailable).
- Auction comp dataset entries cited in-text (Ahlers & Ogletree Inc.; Simpson Galleries, LLC; Uniques & Antiques).
- Drexel company background: general historical summaries and collector references (verify labels for exact collection naming).