The wedding and the fundraiser
Its intended venue: rows of white 6-footers under linens for dining, registration, gifts and the dessert spread.

Catalogue/Tables & Dining Sets/Data sheet
The event-grade 6-footer: same fold-in-half steel build, shipped fully assembled and pitched at weddings and party rentals.
Field notes
FDW sells two 6-foot fold-in-half tables, and this is the events-focused one. The core engineering is shared — a white plastic top over powder-coated steel legs with locking frame joints, rubber feet, and a fold-in-half hinge with side lock and integrated carry handle — but this model arrives completely assembled and folded. Open the box, unfold the legs, and it is in service; there is not a single step between delivery and the first tablecloth.
The listing pitches it at parties and weddings, and that is a fair read of its character: a clean white rectangle that takes linens well, moves by its handle from van to lawn, and stacks flat by the dozen when the venue empties. At 4.4 stars it is the better-rated of the two 6-footers, at a few dollars more than its picnic-badged sibling. If the table will earn its keep at organized events rather than occasional backyard use, this is the version to buy.
The dossier
For a homeowner, skipping assembly is a convenience; for anyone staging an event, it is logistics. A table that arrives ready means ten tables arrive ready — no hardware to lose, no build hour before setup hour. FDW ships this one folded and finished for exactly that buyer, and the same trait makes it the low-friction choice for anyone who simply hates instruction sheets.
Six feet is the event industry’s standard banquet length — it seats six comfortably, eight in a squeeze, and a standard 90×132 tablecloth drops over it to the floor. The locking leg joints keep it rigid under chafing dishes and elbow-leaning guests, and the rubber feet protect gym floors, tent floors and decks that rental venues care about.
Mechanically the two share a design language: fold-in-half, side lock, carry handle, steel legs. This outdoor model costs slightly more and arrives fully assembled with a stronger rating; the picnic model is the value pick. Buying several for events: choose this one. Buying one for the garage: either serves, and the price difference favors the sibling.
The honest ledger
Deployment
Its intended venue: rows of white 6-footers under linens for dining, registration, gifts and the dessert spread.
For anyone who tables events regularly — churches, schools, party hosts — the no-assembly arrival and flat fold make fleet-buying painless.
On a deck or lawn it is the serving spine of a cookout, then folds flat against the garage wall until the next long weekend.
Owner questions
No. The table ships fully assembled and folded — you take it out of the box, unfold the legs until the joints lock, and it is ready to use.
Same fold-in-half steel-leg construction. This model arrives fully assembled, carries a higher rating, and is aimed at events; the picnic model is the cheaper value pick.
Yes — it is a standard 6-foot banquet rectangle, so common banquet linens (such as 90×132 inch cloths for a floor-length drop) fit as intended.
The event-grade 6-footer: same fold-in-half steel build, shipped fully assembled and pitched at weddings and party rentals. Filed under tables & dining sets — checked against the rest of the range on this sheet.
Same aisle
| Model | Headline spec | Rating | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FDW 5-Piece Glass Dining Set | Tempered rectangular glass | ★★★★☆ 4.2 (6,428) | $134.99 | Data sheet → |
| FDW 6 ft Fold-in-Half Table | Stain-resistant textured plastic — smooth enough to write on | ★★★★☆ 4.2 (4,062) | $47.48 | Data sheet → |