I have some time off work, which means time to do mattress shopping. Iām a 6 foot, 165 pound individual looking for an all
latex mattress. I visited Soma and Ton Furniture (aka Dreamworks) this afternoon. Iāll be visiting more mattress places in
the next couple days. The sales person at Soma was very knowledgeable, knew his facts, and no high-pressure sales tactics. But after the visit I do have some questions.
First: I asked about ILD and he said ILD is meaningless - he said latex from different parts of the world have different levels of firmness and instead he emphasized the need for pressure-point relief. I have read on this forum that a few years ago corruption and subsequent failure of a foam supplier created difficulties for GTA mattress manufacturers and left them with very limited access to foams of different ILDs. Is this correct and does it still affect the GTA mattress industry. Could this contribute to Somaās statement that ILD does not matter?
Second: Apparently the elasticity inherent in good-quality latex mattresses automatically provides spinal alignment; i.e., spinal alignemnt is a non-issue for Soma mattresses. The sales person again emphasized the importance of pressure-point
relief - which is especially true for side sleepers. Is this correct re: spinal alignment?
Third: Soma printed spec sheets for two different mattresses. One spec was for a basic mattress with two 3" layers of medium natural rubber and the second was for a three layer mattress (2" firm, 4" my choice, 2" soft pressure relief). The sales person repeated several times that the basic mattress might not provide the needed pressure relief for side sleepers and that a softer mattress top would be better. Is this be correct?
Fourth: Same mattresses and spec sheets as above. All Soma mattresses have wool āquilted and hand-tufted to coverā. The
basic mattress has 700g per square metre. The three layer mattress has 1225g per square metre. What is the significance of
this?
Fifth: The sales person mentioned that Soma mattresses have a density of 85 pounds per cubic foot (I hope I am quoting him
correctly), which is 10 pounds more than most manufacturers. Does this sound correct? And does it really mean that a one
foot cube of latex weighs 85 pounds? That seems to be very heavy!
Sixth: The salesperson says he has owned his mattress for 7 or 8 years and that it hasnāt lost any of its firmness in that time. But I am doubtful that anybody would notice firmness changes over that period of time ā¦; but his claim is that their mattresses do not lose their firmness over time - partially because of the 85 pounds per cubic foot vs 75 pounds.
Soma does offer a 90 day one-time ācomfort adjustmentā on their mattresses ⦠just in case the first try isnāt quite good enough.
Now for Ton Furniture (aka Dreamworks). I said I wanted an all latex mattress, but the closest they have is a soy-based 6" base and 4" latex top (thicknesses may be off). They can custom manufacture an all latex mattress for me, but that would almost double the price. The have natural wool, but I donāt recall how much and they do not specify it in their specs. Finally, their fabric is organic cotton fabric, but they also have bamboo written across the top of the mattress.
So a mattress with a 6" soy base costs about $900 less than a similar latex base, but what do I gain by going with all latex?
As always, many Thanks.
sb