There's no absolutely right or wrong way to set your table for a formal dining experience; arrangements often vary from country to country and person to person. However, as a rule of thumb, remember in what order you will serve your courses and, in turn, in what order your guests will consume them. The utensils or flatware should correlate with each course, working their way from the outer reaches of the table setting in toward the plate as the meal progresses. Does this Spark an idea?
Instructions
- 1
Align the chairs at your dinner table so that they are evenly spaced. Ideally, each chair will directly face another.
2Lay out your table cloth, runner and centerpiece.
3Place service plates directly in front of each chair. The edge of the plates should be one inch from the table's edge.
4Center soup bowls on top of the service plates.
5Starting from the left edges of the plates, lay out the dessert forks, the dinner forks and the salad forks, making sure to align their bottom edges with those of the plates. Again, you are moving left to right as you set out these utensils, from the plate edge out.
6Starting from the right edges of the plates, lay out the knives (blade edges toward the plates), the teaspoons and the soup spoons, making sure to align their bottom edges with those of the plates. Remember to keep moving from right to left as you set them out.
7Set the folded cloth napkins just to the left of the salad forks, again making sure to align the bottom edges.
8Set the bread and butter plates immediately above the dinner forks. The butter knives should then be laid across the plates horizontally, their blade tips pointing left, their blade edges pointing down.
9Set the water glasses above the dinner knives. The white wine glasses should be set to the right of the water glasses. Set the red wine glasses above and slightly between the other two glasses.
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