Restava Westin

Hi the4thdimension,

I certainly will yes. I have some updated information and will post it as soon as I receive a little more that I’m still waiting for (which may be after the end of the long weekend).

[quote]1. The Christeli Astoria 11.5"

This bed comes in at $999 for a king, and has 3" of 5.3lb comfort layer with the rest being 2lb support core. I could not find any information about what they are made of. If anyone has that information and thinks its good quality stuff, chime in. The downside is they don’t appear to be Certipur.[/quote]

Park Place who manufactures their mattresses is on the CertiPur list*.

ADMIN NOTE: *Removed 404 link|Archived Footprint: certipur.us/pages/for-consumers/find-products/

[quote]3. Brooklyn Bedding 10" Cotton Camilla
www.brooklynbedding.com/latex-mattresses...otton-latex-mattress

I would go for the king medium level 6 which comes in at $999. Though they do not list the densities, the site says 3" of blended talalay latex (60s,40n) and 6" HD foam core rated at 28 ILD for the medium bed. The downside is a foundation from them is 170 for the wire raised frame and 345 for the box-spring looking one.[/quote]

The density of latex is only a “comfort” spec (like ILD) and not a “quality spec”. The blended Talalay latex they use is a very high quality material. The polyfoam in the base layer in the Cotton Camilla is 1.5 lb density. their other polyfoam/latex hybrids use 2.17 lb polyfoam in the base layers. There is more about the differences and similarities between the Cotton Camilla and the Bamboo Bliss and the Ultimate Dreams Eurotop (made by Brooklyn Bedding’s sister company Dreamfoam) in post #16 here.

You are looking at some very good final choices but I would decide whether you prefer latex vs memory foam which can help you narrow down your choices. There is more about the pros and cons of each in post #2 here but the best way to know which one you tend to prefer would be based on your own testing or experience.

All of the mattresses you are considering use good quality materials and none of them have any weak links in their design. They would all make good choices.

Post #13 here and the posts it links to has more about the most important parts of the “value” of a mattress purchase including suitability, durability, and the other parts of your personal value equation that are important to you so you can make more meaningful comparisons between your finalists.

Phoenix