Sandblasted stone floated on a "Vine Tendril" base, this style can be done using your stone as well.
Noble little table uses a shard band, twig sheave, "Greek" legs.
This one uses a bamboo top with terra cotta shard edge.
Jumble of twig bits support a stained wooden top (or a glass top, or metal top, or stone top.)
Buttons (could include your own favorites) are sandwiched in glass with a mesh shelf.
What you play is your business, the table can be done to suit your board. Pieces, mainly, can be made as well (that I say because there might be something out there with which I'm not familiar that would be too complex.)
Narrow tables are a love of mine, though you need to place them against a wall to avoid the strolling tumble. This one uses a "wheat" bundle.
"Vine Tendril" uses an amorphic, sandblasted glass.
Tiles on this top are randomized, legs are loops with a basket shelf.
Slate shard top on simple legs, this table uses spirals for detailing.
Octopi tile top are used with "Crete" legs (these adapted from a tripod holder in the Heraklion museum.)
"Ionic Column" legs are topped by a shard tile top - classic look.
Column top uses a basket shelf.
If you love backgammon rather than chess or checkers, that's okay too.
These were done as a metal top pair.
Extremely variable, these small tables can take a thousand shapes, all amorphic, all individual.
(Peacock up, Peacock down)
Stone shard top island set atop looping legs.
"Dingles" are featured; sandblasted glass, tree base.
Tile shard island is based upon a left over bit of one of my wife's sculptures.
This "Archer" features a glass shard side panel.
Two shard top islands top looping legs and an amorphic plate base.
This narrow table, a happy weakness, takes the form of a terra cotta shard top island.
This small side table holds your magazines.
These are stacking (though why that's necessary I'm not sure.) The glass sandwich allows for placement of swag.
Not true faience, tiles colored as fiaence are banded beneath sandblasted glass.
Amorhic "quilt" tiles, Greek legs...
Beach glass is sandwiched beneath sheet glass to produce a quiet bit of light.