Curated pack · free dressing table cad blocks
10 free dressing table CAD blocks for AutoCAD in 2026
By Sumana Kumar · Published 21 Aug 2025 · Updated 26 May 2026
A dressing table is a small piece with an outsized effect on a bedroom layout: it needs a clear approach, a stool that tucks under, and often a mirror that suits an interior elevation. This round-up gathers 10 free dressing table CAD blocks in DWG and DXF — vanity tables with mirrors, makeup consoles, and dressing sets drawn complete with a stool — each at true millimetre dimensions and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. Everything is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup and no watermark.
The dressing table works as both a plan and an elevation block. In plan you set out its footprint against a wall and leave room for the stool and the person seated at it. In elevation you draw the table, the mirror and the drawer faces for joinery and presentation drawings. Because the blocks are scaled, the seated zone in front of the table — easy to forget on a tight wall — is obvious the moment you place it.
Several blocks arrive as complete dressing sets, with the table, mirror and stool already arranged, so you can drop a finished vanity into a bedroom in one move.
What the dressing-table round-up covers
The selection spans the styles a bedroom or dressing area calls for. Slim console-style dressing tables suit narrow walls and compact rooms. Standard vanity tables with a central kneehole and side drawers are the staple. Dressing sets bundle the table with a mirror and a matching stool as a ready arrangement, like the dressing-table set in this round-up. Larger fitted vanities suit master suites and dressing rooms.
Most blocks carry a plan footprint, and several add an elevation showing the mirror and drawer faces. The bundled sets place the stool in its tucked-under position so the plan reads as a complete, usable vanity rather than just a table outline.
Typical dressing-table dimensions
Design around these figures. A dressing table is usually 1000-1400 mm wide and 400-500 mm deep — shallower than a desk, because it sits against a wall and you work facing the mirror. Table height matches a desk at around 720-750 mm. The matching stool is typically 400-450 mm wide and tucks under the kneehole. A wall or table mirror above adds height in elevation but no plan footprint.
The key planning figure is the seated zone: leave around 600-700 mm of clear floor in front of the table so the stool can pull out and a person can sit. On a tight wall, that zone is what decides whether the dressing table actually fits.
Placing a dressing table in the bedroom
Set the dressing table against a wall with good natural light if possible — near a window is ideal for a vanity. Insert the block, snap its back to the wall, and confirm the seated zone in front is clear of the bed, the wardrobe swing and the walkway. If you are using a bundled set, the stool is already placed; for a bare table, add a stool or chair block and tuck it under.
Keep the dressing table on the bedroom furniture layer so it freezes and thaws with the rest of the furniture. For a fitted vanity, you can stretch a dressing-table block along the wall and draw the elevation for the joiner from the same scaled units.
Plan for layout, elevation for the mirror wall
Use the plan to prove the dressing table fits: footprint against the wall, seated zone clear, stool tucked under. That is the drawing that confirms the vanity belongs in the room without choking the circulation. For a built-in vanity, the plan also coordinates it with sockets for lighting and any returns.
Use the elevation for the presentation and joinery set: the table, the mirror, the drawer faces and any vanity lighting. The elevation blocks let you show a client the dressing wall and give a joiner the face dimensions, drawn from the same scaled units as the plan so the two drawings agree.
Pairing the table with a stool
A dressing table is rarely drawn alone — the stool is part of the piece. The bundled dressing sets include a matching stool, but you can also pull a stool from the stool round-up in this furniture series to suit the style and the room. A backless stool tucks fully under the table and reads tidily in plan; a small upholstered chair gives more comfort but needs slightly more pull-out space.
Whichever you choose, place the stool in its tucked-under position in the plan so the seated zone you draw is honest. If you upgrade to a chair with a back, remember it will protrude further when tucked in, so allow a little extra clearance in front of the table.
Where dressing-table blocks are used
Dressing tables appear in residential bedrooms and dressing rooms, hotel and resort guest rooms, serviced apartments, and salon and beauty-room layouts where makeup stations are needed. Interior designers use them to complete a bedroom scheme; architects use them to confirm a master suite has room for a vanity; joinery designers use the elevations to detail fitted dressing walls.
Pair the dressing-table round-up with the bed, wardrobe, bedside-table and stool blocks in this furniture series to lay out a full bedroom from one consistent, free library. Scaled and licence-clear, the same vanity carries from a concept layout to a coordinated furniture drawing.
Free download
Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.
Questions
Frequently asked
Do the dressing tables come with a stool?+
Several blocks arrive as complete dressing sets with a matching stool and mirror already arranged. For the bare table blocks, pair them with a stool from the stool round-up in this furniture series.
How much space does a dressing table need in front?+
Leave around 600-700 mm of clear floor in front so the stool can pull out and a person can sit. The table itself is usually 1000-1400 mm wide and a shallow 400-500 mm deep against the wall.
Do the blocks include the mirror in elevation?+
Many do. The elevation blocks show the table, the mirror and the drawer faces for joinery and presentation drawings, while the plan blocks give the footprint and seated zone for layout.
Are the dressing-table CAD blocks free for commercial use?+
Yes. Every block downloads free in DWG and DXF with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and they are cleared for commercial project use.
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