If you have not yet looked at what upgrades your banqueting furniture needs for the upcoming summer season, it's important to do so sooner rather than later, to make sure you have time to order and receive your new banquet tables and chairs in good time for your first event of 2017.
The new year is always a good time to do that, as the weather starts to improve in the run-up to spring and the evenings rapidly start to get much lighter for longer, giving you more hours of daylight to deal with the things you might have been putting off since the autumn.
Banqueting furniture upgrades and replacements are a prime example of that, especially if you suffered any breakages over the Christmas party season, or perhaps realised your existing banquet tables and chairs are not in as good shape as you had thought.
Take stock of what you do still have in good condition, and decide whether it's worth trying to match your new banqueting tables and chairs to what's left of your old banquet furniture, or potentially invest in completely new replacements so everything is consistent not only in appearance, but crucially in terms of being the right size to work together.
Having banqueting tables all the same height makes it much easier to put together long tables for feasts and larger events, and means you don't have to worry about putting the 'right' tables together when setting out your banquet furniture either.
To keep your new banquet tables and chairs in better condition for longer, invest in table and chair trolleys to wheel them into position and avoid bumps and scrapes along the way.
Banquet table trolleys come in two designs, suitable for either circular or rectangular tables, so make sure to match with what you are buying, while a chair trolley can wheel a full stack of stackable chairs to where they need to be, improving safety and convenience both at once.
All of our trolleys have protective padding on the places where the chairs or tables make contact with the trolley, so you shouldn't have to worry about any direct contact between hard materials like wood or metal that could leave a scratch.