On Memory Foam, Latex and Spring Mattresses

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MEMORY FOAM vs. LATEX

While all foams have some similarities, there are notable differences in feel and performance of memory foam vs. latex. To start, let’s put out two terms: slow response and fast response. Memory foam is called a slow response foam. To define slow response, let’s add in another term: creep. Creep means that the foam slowly conforms to heat applied, anywhere between 80 degrees to 120 degrees F. It also slowly reforms to its flat shape as it cools. Memory foam has creep, thus it is a slow response foam. Latex, on the other hand, is a fast response foam. Any pressure put on it will create compression; once the pressure is removed, the latex rebounds to its original shape as soon as the pressure is removed. Latex’s movement is very simple; its motion is quickly and directly in response to pressure.

Because memory foam can take a little while to cool down, the valleys made by sleepers take a while to return to a flat position, since warm memory foam is not flat foam. This has some sleepers resenting the valleys that they have to crawl out of to change sleeping positions. Latex does not develop valleys; instead it has a small bounce to it, that fast rebound that returns it to shape. This bounce is most noticed in the firmer layers as their density gives more pushback against the supporting slats. The spongy cradling effect of the softer layers are noted for their cushy feel and absorbent abilities of pressure points. In short, latex’s bounce is characteristic of its fast response and memory foam’s creep is characteristic of its slow response.

Since memory foam’s creep is responsible for retaining heat, memory foam sleeps hot. Latex, while still a solid piece of foam not a bladder full of cold air like a spring mattress, does not retain heat, thus does not sleep hot.

FOAM vs. SPRING

Comparing one foam to another presents some obvious similarities; they have multiple firmnesses to choose from, they feel spongy, they are solid, they are heavy. Comparing a spring mattress to a foam mattress presents more of a striking difference.  Equate the feel of a spring mattress to the support you would feel on a hammock; equate the feel of a foam mattress to sleeping on a giant sponge. To expound, a latex mattress can mold itself around you the way a stress ball molds around your fingers as you grip it. A spring mattress can not be molded, though it can stretch like a trampoline. Latex makes deep pressure point relief possible. In a foam, the latex will dip underneath you in exactly the points that the most pressure is  applied. One a spring mattress, a point of pressure will cause the entire surface to slope toward that point.

It is possible however to get the best of both feels, the spring mattress feel and the latex mattress feel, by picking the appropriate ticking or zippered encasement.  Combine the bounce and pressure absorption of the latex with the stiffness and thickness of the Quilted Ticking. The ticking will imitate the taut fabrics on conventional coil mattresses and will be able to cushion your entire body rather than specific points. The stiffer ticking forces a more even weight distribution of the sleeper  creating some slope and some sinking in, similar to a spring bending underneath your weight. The quilted ticking will also moderate some of the squishiness of the soft latex layers, diffusing that enveloping feeling that some of the softer layers give off as they cradle you. If you want to be raise above the latex instead of being surrounded by it, besides choosing firm layers of latex, consider the tautness the quilted ticking provides.

 

Organic Waterproof Laminated Jersey Fabric

Organic WaterProof Jersey Fabric
  • Sold by the 88″ yard
  • Spill blocking
  • Flexible
  • Machine washable
  • Barrier cloth
  • Undyed
  • GOTS Organic

This GOTS waterproof fabric is made from two thin sheets of soft, jersey knit fabric that are laminated together with a GOTS certified glue, the only GOTS certified product of its kind. The fabric is soft and very flexible. It does not crunch nor alter the feel of your bedding. It does a fantastic job blocking moisture from penetrating to your mattress or pillow. It is not plastic. It does not sound, feel or act like plastic.

This fabric is featured in our Zip Off Waterproof Ticking because of the ease of machine washing only the top layer of your ticking. It also is used in our Waterproof Puddle Pad.

Do you need a GOTS allergy barrier? This fabric is very effective. Usually barrier fabrics have a particularly tight weave, but because of the nature of the laminate, this fabric will keep dust mites, pet dander, pollen, mold spores and other allergens from getting into your bed by acting as a physical barrier.

If one of our wool felt products suits you better as a spill blocking fabric, visit its product here.
Need a custom product made from this fabric? Email us.

Amazeballs

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DIY organic mattress

Mattress Review:

1st night. Well, my back does not hurt AT ALL, so that’s amazeballs. If the hubby didn’t have a cold, and didn’t snore like a buzz saw the whole night, I mighta actually had an amazing night’s sleep. (Was thinking about going to sleep on one of the other beds, but I was like, “NO gosh darn it! I’m going to sleep on my new mattress!! Even if it’s only for four hours total!!”) Anyway, it’s awesome. (P.S. my back SHOULD hurt, especially after hauling those latex slabs around, and trying to wrestle them into the ticking…… Also, new mattresses almost always give me a back ache as my scoliosis does flare up often.)

2nd night.  I’m sore today, but we did do a bunch of physical stuff yesterday. Hubby was out with a buddy late last night and normally that means I can’t fall asleep until he gets home , but I was completely out, and didn’t wake until 7, so that likely means I slept well. Next thing we are going to do is actually visit a chiropractor as often as recommend for my curvy spine. I’ve loooong felt that would be very beneficial, and he finally agreed, but he didn’t want to do it until the mattress came. – Blaine, MN

I truly love it!!!

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Initially I had a hard time putting the first slab in but after sleeping on that while waiting for the other to arrive, the knit ticking stretched out enough and then it was easy to add in the second slab. I love it. Interestingly enough, I was initially sleeping on just the hard 3″ and did fine with it, however with the top firm layer, it’s much more luxurious. I truly love it!!! – S.K., Washington

 

Home

Step 1: Choose Your Supplies

shredded natural latex fill

Choose the fill for your mattress or pillow. Do you want to sleep on GOLS organic natural latex slabs or wool or both? Do you want to make a pillow of millet hulls, kapok fiber or shredded latex?

Step 2: Wrap It Up

Choose the cases you want to wrap your fill in. Do you want a washable knit ticking or quilted wool pillow case? Use our helpful FAQ and product guides to make an educated decision.

Step 3: Put It All Together

Take part in the process. How hands on would you like to be? Do you want to sew from a pattern and use our GOTS organic fabric and supplies or would you like us to sew your custom piece for you?

Triple Fill Mattress Topper

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We recently purchased a mattress topper for our bed 3 months ago. We asked for a custom blend of kapok fibers, woolly bolas & shredded natural latex for the fill and a twill ticking zippered case. We are so happy with this product. It took about 2 hours to create our new topper – all the fibers were so clean & packaged well. It is the perfect blend of comfort and goes really well with our firm natural latex mattress. My husband even loves it too. The company was so easy & professional to work with. Very, very happy with everything. We will definitely shop here again in the future. Thank you, E Peters

Infant Car Seat, Stroller, Bassinet

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natural latex custom car seat pad

And I thought custom couch cushions were a fun variation from the tickings we make so often and then we got this project. Thanks B for the detail we got to put into cutting the latex and sewing all these pieces with your fabric choices and for your patience as you can imagine the time something this custom took. Months of choosing, deciding, cutting and sewing planned for this baby’s travels. Congratulations on your birth baby S.

Pictures are featured in order of original piece followed by our piece. The latex cut at the end is for another baby project she was working on (ours on the right). We didn’t sew the case for that piece but did finagle curves and angles out of this latex piece.

Child Mattress Q & A

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Q. We have a 4 1/2 month old who is growing out of his co-sleeper and we want to make him a mattress he can use for several years. What do you think is the best route for an affordable baby mattress? What is the most common build?

A. There are many ways to make a mattress. Here are a few ideas that have been made with our products. This first one is the most common, the other two more creative.

  1. A 3″ medium of natural latex inside an expandable ticking would save room for another layer later, wool batting is optional. This is the build in my youtube video here.
  2. A full sized wool topper folded in half would be somewhat thin, but sufficient for a few years, if you don’t mind a somewhat permanent crease in the middle when you unfold it to put on a mattress. It would also be a nice addition to a 3″ piece of latex later.
  3. Two mattresses out of one piece of latex: Cut a crib mattress out of a Twin piece of latex and save the larger L shape of the latex for later when your child needs the larger space. Then you can put both pieces together in the same ticking. This can also be done with a Full sized piece of latex. Two cribs will fit into a Full.
Q. In the most common build of 3″ latex & expandable ticking, is there a reason you chose that particular ticking as opposed to the other options, two of which are less expensive?

A. I mentioned the expandable ticking because it is a common choice with budgeting parents who know that their child will be comfortable on 3″ of latex until they near 100 lbs. They often want to buy a second layer later when they have time to save for it. As latex is said to last 20-30 years, that first layer of latex will still be fresh to use in the mattress when it is turned into a 6″ mattress.  Then that first layer can either be placed on top of or under another layer to create a new feel. See The Banana Test for more thorough tips on picking depth and firmness.

The Twill Ticking is also an option, in fact, all 3 of my children have it on their mattresses.  It is durable and simple.  Its stiffness makes it strong enough for the tufting needle to pierce without snagging it which is why we recommend it for use with our wool flake when making a wool mattress.

The Knit Ticking is also an option. It is made of the same material that the Expandable Knit is, so both cases are quite flexible, letting the sleeper feel the latex or wool underneath completely.  It being a static height usually is cause to choose a 6″ combo of latex that will last the child into adulthood.

The Zip Off Wool Ticking is also an option.  Its best features are, of course, the removable wool puddle pad on the top of the ticking. It works well for parents who want a wool puddle pad, but don’t want to buy both ticking and puddle pad.

The sateen fabric covering the wool batting on our topper is very soft and smooth. It is nice to have a thin layer of fabric between you and the wool. Wool batting has its limitations, while lofty and quite fluffy, you should be aware that more that 3 layers of wool on top of each other may not only shift around easily (thus the tufting on the toppers) but also may easily form body trenches, unless your child is very active on every surface of the mattress. Keeping in mind that every layer of 3 lb. batting compresses to about 1/2″ and a layer of 4 lb. batting to about 3/4″, you have a fairly thin mattress with only 3 layers. That is why I mentioned folding a topper in half, the fabric layers and probably the frequent straightening of the fold should help the top to compress fairly easily. Of course, you could make your own topper with our kits here.

Q. Would it be cheaper to fill it only with wool batting?

A. No and it is not advisable to make a mattress out of just wool batting, a topper, yes, but a thick mattress without wool flake and just batting will trench too easily and leave you with body impressions. For instructions on making a wool mattress, see this picture tutorial or this diagram. Wool batting is a nice addition for comfort or protection of the latex. See previous paragraph.

Q. Thank you so much for your very detailed response! I am planning to rest the medium density latex on a just wood slats which would be say 1 – 2″ above the floor. Based on the Kg/m3 metric and your rule of thumb #3, I think I (150 lbs) would feel the slats if I sit on the 3″ latex to read him a book. Then,
  1. Could adding the wool batting on a medium 3″ alleviate the issue somewhat?
  2. Would something like this work:  A 3″ firm latex instead but with wool batting. Could this configuration make it sufficiently supportive for an adult to sit on for a short time and somewhat soft and abundantly supportive at the same time for a child to lie down?

A. I find that reading books for 15-30 minutes on my children’s mattress is not cushy comfortable, but it is certainly tolerable. Adding the wool batting will deepen the mattress which will provide slightly more comfort. Substituting the firm layer would probably be a good idea if you plan on making reading or sleeping on the bed a habit. Unless your child is a sensitive sleeper, he or she will probably mostly notice the wool and only slightly notice the firm latex.

My Gratitude

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I want to express my gratitude for the latex slabs and ticking! The mattress is even better than anticipated. My partner and I slept really well last night! I feel so lucky to have stumbled upon your website. Thank you for fair pricing, quality nontoxic products, and excellent customer service. I will be recommending your business to my friends and family.

Cloth Napkins, Set of 4

Organic Cloth Napkin

Using the same fabric we use for our Twill Ticking and most inner case for custom upholstery, we have made your table bright and your guests clean with these 100% cotton and 100% organic cloth napkins. The fabric is grown and processed here in the USA, specifically Arizona and Texas.

Mulitpurpose Cloths, Set of 4

Organic Cloth, Multipurpose

Here is bringing organic right into your daily routines, using the same fabric we use in our Knit Ticking, Expandable Knit Ticking, Quilted Ticking, and outer pillow cases. These multipurpose cloths are soft and washable. They are thick, durable and perfect for

  • baby messes
  • burp cloths
  • window cleaning
  • dusting
  • spills
  • the extra cloth in your purse for who knows what or when
  • (don’t gasp) reusable toilet paper

Wash as normal. Hot water, strong soaps and hot dryers are just fine for the fabric as well as gentle washes and soaps.

Oven Mitt

organic oven mitt, wool

This organic oven mitt will keep the heat away from your hands with its thick layer of wool felt quilted between two layers of twill fabric. Consider your hands flame protected as well. Wool has one of the highest burning points of all fabrics, 570F to ignite when touched with a flame, compared to cotton at 255F. For interest’s sake, polyesters will melt at 150F and ignite around 430F. Wool does not melt.

This oven mitt is made using the same fabric we use for our Twill Ticking and most inner case for custom upholstery, that is grown and processed here in the USA, specifically Arizona and Texas. It is also made with our Wool Felt fabric that we use for our DIY and finished puddle pads.

Hand wash with mild soap and lukewarm water. Line dry.

 

Hot Pad

organic hot pad

This organic hot pad will keep the heat away from your hands with its thick layer of wool felt quilted between two layers of twill fabric. Consider your hands flame protected as well. Wool has one of the highest burning points of all fabrics, 570F to ignite when touched with a flame, compared to cotton at 255F. For interest’s sake, polyesters will melt at 150F and ignite around 430F. Wool does not melt.

This oven mitt is made using the same fabric we use for our Twill Ticking and most inner case for custom upholstery, that is grown and processed here in the USA, specifically Arizona and Texas. It is also made with our Wool Felt fabric that we use for our DIY and finished puddle pads.

Hand wash with mild soap and lukewarm water. Line dry.

 

How to Tuft a Wool Mattress or Topper

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Tufting is a simple and useful addition to your wool mattress or topper or comforter.  The tufts help keep the wool from shifting inside the ticking and help you control the firmness of your mattress.  The technique is no more than down and up and a double knot.  The above slide show should help clarify.

CLARIFICATION

This technique is not necessary when wrapping a sheet or two of wool batting around natural latex. The latex will grip the wool all on its own. It is great for loose fibers that would want to shift inside their cases, such as wool flake, kapok fiber, shredded latex, and wool batting.

TO CONSIDER
  1. Allow 12″ of twine per tuft as having enough of a tail is essential to easy needling. Do not snip twine to 12″ lengths before tufting, leave the string long.
  2. Distance your tufts 12″ apart for a wool comforter or topper and 6″ apart for a wool mattress.  The thick depth of mattress can create drastic valleys when tufted.  To avoid the valleys, keeps your tufts relatively close together and follow Consideration #3.
  3. Keep in mind that the tighter you pull the knots, the deeper a valley and the firmer a mattress you are making.  With a wool mattress, deep valleys mean that you will need to smooth it over with a wool topper. Alternatively, if you tufts are only 50% tight, the hills and valleys will be moderate and generally tolerable.
  4. If tufting a large mattress, such as a King or Queen, consider putting it on top of 1 x 4’s supported by saw horses so that you can crawl underneath to grab your needle and send it back up. Otherwise you will be constantly lifting 50 lbs+ of mattress every tuft you make.
  5. It is important to make sure all your wool is evenly spaced out. If you find that it is not evenly flat after tufting, unzip the ticking and either using your hand or a grabber like those trash picker uppers, grab wool flake from spots where it shouldn’t be and move it to a new spot.
TO PURCHASE

Our toppers and comforters have been machine tufted with circular stitches, so this technique will not be evident on them.

Organic Color Grown Curtains

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organic curtains

Using fabric that was not dyed but was woven with different colors of cotton to create its pattern, I was happy to see this fabric four years after I purchased the same from NearSea Naturals (who sold to Organic Cotton Plus). Then, we used this versatile fabric for a futon ticking, now, using even organic thread, this customer had us turn the fabric into curtains.

Wool Flake Price Decrease

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Wool Flake

Wool Flake

 

I have been getting quite a number of wool mattress inquiries lately. It always excites me to talk to people interested in physically participating in their mattress choice.  However, my wool flake prices, while very fair, have been too high to enable some of your plans. Thus, to share in your creativity, I will lower my wool flake prices. We are here to empower your choices, which we already do in carefully sourcing our wool.  Now let us provide even better conditions for your inspirations. Mattress making ahead!

Wool Flake product is available both in its product as well as in the Pillow Fill Calculator, where you can plug in your preferred depth to know how much wool to purchase.

Here are some useful wool flake links:

DIY wool mattress

Off the Charts

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On my journey to do a DIY all natural bed I came across DIY Natural Bedding. I called up to ask some questions, and I was delighted that I found someone on the other end of the phone who cared about and could understand what I needed. The kindness and intelligence of the customer service is outstanding (as others have said: it’s true they do research your needs and questions if they don’t have immediate answers!).

The quality of what I ordered is off the charts. The prices are cheaper than just about anyone’s anywhere else. The shipping was done in a timely manner; everything was properly packed to protect against the elements and bugs, which is more than I can say for a lot of other all natural bedding companies.

Thanks to DIY I have a fantastic 1/2 queen day bed made up of two 100% natural 1/2 queen dunlop latex toppers — one 3″ soft and one 3″ extra soft — with an organic 100% cotton encasement and luxurious 1/2 queen organic wool puddle pad (yes, it’s luxurious). They also made the ticking and wool puddle pad for my night bed.

I also want to make dust mites covers because someone in the house has a terrible allergy. Thanks to DIY’s help and perhaps above all patience as well as a good bit of inspiration, I am on my way to making them myself using the ticking pattern they sell and their zippers (I found the cloth elsewhere. But they even helped me in the search to find the proper cloth). I am making it myself for less half the price of any dust mite cover on the internet of the same quality (it’s very hard to find and quite expensive to buy a dust mite mattress encasement that opens like a book).

I am very happy with my purchase as well as experience working with them.

A.B.

10″ Tufting Needle

  • 10″ Straight Needle
  • Single Point

This 10″ tufting needle is perfect for spearing a thick wool or kapok mattress and battening it down with tufts.  The most unbendable needle will pierce through your thick wool flake, drawing the twine out the other side and back again to be simply tied into a knot.  The tufts will keep your wool flake or kapok from shifting inside its ticking, keeping your mattress smooth and even.

At 13 gauge, this tufting needle is strong enough for any upholstery project as well as mattress building.

If you need a smooth twine for your project, view its product.

To make a wool topper with our sateen fabric, choose the 5″ tufting needle instead of this one.

Custom Calculators

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Creativity drives us here at DIY Natural Bedding.  Sometimes we create because we must; sometimes because we see a need for an item; other times because we like to make a choice not just logically but tactically; sometimes because we need to feel the freedom that in creativity is limitless; because we have time to fill. I know that you are a creative crowd too, because here you are, on a DIY site, searching for something you can create.

Custom Work

We want to help you create, repurpose, and invent, no matter your level of inspiration, motivation, or skill so we have created a new menu in the shop: Custom. This menu will give you three tools to help you in the planning stages of your project.  Use them and feel free to contact us with any questions.

 

Custom WorkOur Custom Sewing page gives you details on our sewing work. As with our ticking, we go to either extreme and in between: We can supply you with fabric or we can sew up and stuff your fabric for you or most interesting for us, we can create you an entirely new design never conceived before.

 

Custom Cut Natural Latex

Our Custom Latex Cuts will give you the price of a piece of latex you want us to cut for you.  We can cut standard angles or even your odd shapes like for a boat mattress or a crescent nursing pillow. If you want to cut your own, check out the Clearance section for a variety of depths and firmnesses.

 

pillow fill calculatorOur Custom Pillow Fill Weight Calculator is a very useful tool if you want to know how much fill a shape.  Are you making a bed pillow, a dog bed, a bean bag chair, a pincushion? With three simple steps, you can know how much fill you might need for your project. Enter in your dimensions, pick your shape, and choose your type of fill to see a total weight provided.  Square cubic inch measurements are also provided for your mathematical pleasure.

Happy DIYing.

Custom Sewing

Examples of our custom sewing work

  • Couch Cushions
  • Banquette Cushions
  • Setee Cushions
  • Bench Seat Cushions
  • Bassinet Pad
  • Playmat
  • Dog Beds
  • Stuffed Animal
  • Bean Bags
  • Pouf
  • Decorative Pillows
  • Sleeping Bag
  • Duvet Covers
  • Sheets
  • More: See our Customer pictures

Information to Collect

Please email us the answers to the following questions.

  1. What are your dimensions?
  2. What fabric do you want to use?  Will you be sending us your fabric to use or will you be using our GOTS organic fabrics (Sateen, Twill and Double Knit)?
  3. Do you want an inner and outer case made for each piece?
  4. Do you want the fabric prewashed so it will not shrink when you wash it?
  5. Do you want the final seam closed with a zipper or with stitching?
  6. If with zipper, what side/dimension does the zipper belong on?
  7. Do you any decorative accents on your piece or are box corners suitable (like on our Knit Ticking); these will raise the price?
    • Gussets (side panels)
    • Piping (cording on the top and bottom edges)
    • Tufts (knots of string to keep the fill from shifting)
  8. Where are you located so we can calculate shipping cost?

Your Yardage Calculations

If you will be sending your fabric to us and want us to calculate how much you will need, email us the answers to these additional questions.

  1. How wide is your fabric of choice? 60”, 45”?
  2. What direction does the pattern lie? Selvedge edge to selvedge edge or cut end to cut end?

fancy line

To calculate the cost of a custom cut solid piece of natural latex to fill your cases with, see our Natural Latex Custom Cut Calculations Page.

To calculate the cost and amount of a loose fill to fill your case with, see our Custom Pillow Fill pages.

Wool Flake (per 5 lbs)

Wool Flake

 

  • Washed and Picked Wool
  • Dense
  • 10 lbs.

This wool flake is perfect to make your mattress with. It is clean of the lanolin and grass that adorn sheep in the field and is ready for your use.  It has been washed and picked clean.

You could hand card it to use in comforters and toppers or you could stuff a piece of ticking with wool, tuft it and call it a mattress.

This washed wool can be piled on top of itself in the hundreds of lbs. without easily trenching. It is not lofty and has deliberately not been carded to create the sheets of wool that we sell in batts and use in our toppers and comforters.  Its denseness is its strength here, as it will make a firm mattress that will not valley as easily as an equal weight of wool batts would.

You will want to tuft your ticking to your wool to prevent shifting and bunching. Tufting Needles and Twine are in our Supplies section and guide on how to tuft is in the blog.  For more information on Making a Wool Mattress, see this step by step sketch (click the image to enlarge it) or this picture tutorial. Our Twill Ticking would make a strong case for this wool.

Here are general weights to give you an idea of where to start.  Check out the Pillow Fill Calculator to find an exact amount for your preferred height of mattress.  Make sure to pick “Boxed Rectangle” as the shape to fill.

Crib 3″ 15 lbs.
Twin 3″ 
25 lbs.
Full 6″  
70 lbs.
Queen 5″ 
70 lbs.
King 8″ 
145 lbs.

This item is sold in bulk with a minimum of 5 lbs. It comes to $13 a lb compared to wool batting at about $22 a lb.

Business Expanding & Moving

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BIG NEWS! 2 showrooms in 2 states

We’re moving. Local is becoming West Lafayette, IN. Due to my husband’s job change, West Lafayette, home of Purdue University will become this business’s home as well.. All online orders will be processed out of there as well as shipping of most custom orders and swaps of all Buy and Try. We will continue to show the latex and ticking samples out of our home there.

In NorthEast Minneapolis, a friend who also believes in naturally living will open up a room in her house for a showroom. In both MN and IN, you will be able to try out the different latex densities and feel the different ticking options, as well as test the pillows and wool products out.  [EDIT July, 2015: We are now even closer to the highway in Lafayette, IN.] [EDIT: November 2015: The NE Minneapolis showroom is no in Eden Prairie, just south of Minneapolis.]

Contact information stays the same. Warranties, Buy and Try Policy and our products stay the same. To schedule showings in MN or IN, see our contact page.

Thanks to all of you in Minneapolis who have helped our business grow.  We hope we can continue to offer you bedding options that meet your needs, enable your choices and work for your pocketbook. Those reasons are the some of the best reasons to DIY.

Stock Sale – 10% Off

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Friday, August 15 – Tuesday, August 19  – All items in stock are 10% off.

Midnight to midnight.

This list includes all of the following items:

  • Almost all pillow parts, kits and fills – Use coupon code “stock10%” at checkout for 10% off.
    • Shredded Natural Latex Pillow Kit
    • Wool Pillow Kit
    • Kapok Pillow Kit
    • Kapok by the lb.
    • Shredded Natural Latex by the lb.
    • Outer Pillow Cases
    • Inner Pillow Case
    • Quilted Pillow Case, Standard & Travel
  • All Clearance items- Use coupon code “stock10%” at checkout for 10% off.
    • Latex
      • King Firm
    • Quilted Wool Ticking, Twin 6″
    • Twill Ticking, 4″ Twin
    • Twill Ticking, 6″ Crib
  • Natural Latex
    • Twin Medium
    • Twin Firm
    • Full Extra Firm
    • Full Hard
    • 1/2 Queen Medium
    • 1/2 Queen Firm
    • California King Soft
  • Wool
    • 3″ Topper, King
    • DIY Wool Puddle Pads
    • Wool Balls
    • Wool Felt Kit
  • Quilted Wool Ticking, Twin 9″

As stock is sold, items will be removed from the sale, though will still be available for regular price purchase. Stock items will ship out on Thursday 8/21.

Why the stock sale?  In short:

Summer Vacation 8/22

Our shop will be closed for shipping from 8/22 – 9/1.  Some orders will be processed, but they may be delayed about a week. Orders may still be placed online and emails may be sent, but phone calls may not be answered until 9/1.  Thank you for giving our family a nonworking week!

15″ Latex on top of Steel Screening

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Here are the pics of the process of putting the bed together.

I used welded wire hardware cloth to lay over the Bedder Bed Frame to keep the foam from pressing thru the openings in the bed frame over time.  The steel bed frame maker said this would not happen, but I did not trust it, so I devised this solution, which I know will prevent it.  We picked up two 10 ft. x 3 ft. rolls of hardware cloth with 1/2″ square holes (small animal caging) at our local Orcheln Farm and Home for about $12 each. After trimming the hardware cloth to fit the bed frame and securing with cable ties, the two frame sides slipped right into the wooden bed frame opening where the slats were.  The whole assembly is rock solid.  No problems there.

I expected the mattresses to be real trouble hefting around, but they were not bad at all to move and nudge into place.  We loaded them onto the wire frame before removing the plastic bags they were in.  So they were in partial position right from the start of being opened.

The ticking was a bit of a challenge, getting it zipped up, but going a little at a time and with the two of us, we got the mattresses into it.  The mattresses in the one pic enclosed in the ticking look a bit out of kilter, but this will smooth out over some use of the bed.  One reason is that the mattress pads appeared to come from different vendors and/or different places (foam was slightly different colors, etc.), and were not cut to precisely the same 60 x 80 dimensions.

The finished bed is very close to the height of our old bed.

We started at 10 AM, took a 1 hour break for lunch, and finished at 2 PM, including about 30 minutes for cleanup of tools, plastic wrapping, etc.

We laid down on the bed and it is very springy and comfortable.  I also did not feel like I was rolling towards the center when my wife laid on it.

So far, so good.  The first night sleep is long awaited.

UPDATE one week later:

We are getting  used to the bed, and it is a definite improvement.  The scariest thing to me about foam was that it would swallow me up and be hot.  This is why I assiduously avoided the memory foam hype.  But this bed does not do that at all.  It is very cushiony, and conforms to the body, but you do not sink deeply in it and it isn’t hot.  One thing I like is that when you sleep on your back which I sometimes do for short periods at night, it rises up to fill the small of your back and provides some support there – very comfortable.  A negative, which I will get used to, is that there isn’t much support for sitting on the side of the bed – feels like you will slide off.  The fifth mattress exaggerates that feeling as well – you can imagine it better if you contemplate the possible experience of sleeping on a stack of 100 foam mattresses!  The modified-by-me Bedder Bed steel frame is rock solid, and completely noiseless.  All in all, we are very satisfied with the whole setup.  My wife, who was skeptical of the whole thing, and especially of buying a $2,000+ mattress without trying it, even said the other day that she is beginning to like the bed and mattress setup. (Sullivan, Missouri)

Heron and Ephie

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Heron & Eppie

 

Two Twin size mattresses made with our components: Heron’s (circa July 2014) is a 6″ Combo of Medium Latex over a Firm Latex in Quilted Ticking with a Wool Puddle Pad.  Ephie’s (circa July 2012) is 6″ Firm Natural Latex wrapped in one batt of wool encased in our Twill Cotton Ticking.

Ephie was our 5th customer ever. Thanks for coming back! (Edina, MN)

We love our mattress!

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My boyfriend and I were sleeping on an air mattress a year ago and decided we wanted a nontoxic mattress. We plunged into the confusing world of researching mattresses online and created a spreadsheet listing 15 companies and all the pros and cons of each. When we eventually found DIY Natural Bedding they came out at the top of the list because their 9″ latex layers (three 3″ layers) mattress was one of the most affordable ones available. Also, Deborah was amazingly great at getting to the bottom of what is really going on with natural bedding suppliers and also was so great at answering all my many questions, even researching the answer and then getting back to me if she didn’t have the answer on hand. At the time, I noted that this company is “very trustworthy, does good research.”

I had a number of concerns  – I was concerned the mattress cover would inhibit the natural way the latex bends around the body; it would be a shame to spend so much on latex and then ruin it with a tight fitted, stiff cover. I am happy to report that the organic cotton knit mattress cover is soft and stretchy and contours to the latex perfectly.

Another concern I had was smell because I had bought a latex topper once that smelled really strong for a couple weeks at least. With the latex from DIY Natural Bedding there was never any smell, not even when it first arrived. I am extremely chemically sensitive and I have not ever had any issues with this bed.

We had a hell of a time figuring out the densities to order, and we ended up having to get some replacements. Deborah’s policy allowing 2 months for replacements was great because for various reasons we took a long time figuring out what was going to work.

We got the wool batting to place under the cover but we have never used it because we don’t like the way it sticks to the latex – we tend to rearrange the latex every once in awhile just to see how it feels and we don’t like pulling the wool off the latex every time (not much sticks it’s just I realize I like things really clean and my personal preference would be to have the wool encased in something). We may get some fabric and sew a wool topper with the wool at some point, or a blanket. I made a huge pillow out of some of it, which is really divine, although it does need fluffing up every once in a while.

The mattress is super comfortable just with the knit cover, although I know we need to get something else to protect it from spills and also to offer more general protection like from oxygen. We probably would have been better off with the quilted ticking – I was worried it wouldn’t stretch enough but now that I see how the organic cotton cloth stretches probably the quilted ticking would be stretchy enough too.

And just fyi, I weigh 230 and my boyfriend weighs 220 lbs and what ended up working out for both of us is the bottom layer firm, and both the middle and top layers extra firm. We hate the soft and medium as they compress too much and feel extremely hard, but I guess for people weighing less they would be great.

We love our mattress! – H.H.

Quilted Fabric by the yard now available

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Quilted Fabric now available!

Pillowcase, ticking, quilt for your bed, you name it.

Here is life simplified. You could spend an hour picking out fabric, cut it to size, purchase some wool batting, drive to a long arm quilter, wait a few weeks to get it quilted together and then hand sew the binding on like a normal quilter, or… you could do it the easy way. We’ll quilt it, you sew it as you like.

We also have added zipper by the foot to our supplies page as retail fabric stores will not have zipper lengths suitable for mattress sizes.

Quilted Wool 
Zipper by the Foot