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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Beds Are Becoming Centerpiece Of The Room

Barbara Mayer Associated Press

A spectacular bed - say a four-poster with canopy and yards of fabric hangings - once was the prerogative of royalty. But now beds that Louis XIV would have been proud to number among his 400 can be found at any furniture store worth its salt.

Judging from recent introductions this fall at the North Carolina furniture market, more impressive beds are on the way. Virtually every new furniture collection had its mammoth four-poster bed, as well as additional styles that would be the centerpiece in any bedroom.

“We have found that a spectacular bed sells a lot of furniture,” says William Merrill, design director of Hickory Chair Co. “People find a beautiful bed. Then they buy a dresser, chest and armoire to go with it.”

His company offers a tall, solid cherry bed with an impressive carved rococo headboard. It is not a direct copy of an antique but instead is a fantasy of what royalty might have slept on in, say, the 18th century.

Another fanciful faux antique four-poster comes from The Lane Co.’s Marrakesh collection. The bed has tall spiral posts narrowing to a flamelike finial as well as an elaborately shaped headboard and footboard.

Although bed widths are fixed, bed heights are not - and they are getting taller. A bed introduced by Ralph Lauren as part of its Desert Hollywood Collection has a carved, gilded and distressed headboard that stands over 6 feet tall.

Mattresses and box springs also are much taller than they used to be, which makes the bed higher. Years ago, a box spring and mattress were each 7 inches high and bed manufacturers calculated 15 inches for the bedding when creating the bed frame, says Merrill of Hickory.

Today a set of bedding ranges from 20 inches to 26 inches high, raising the bed so high that many people now buy bed steps in order to get into it.

If wood beds do not appeal, consider metal beds. The metal may be braided, twisted or elaborately curved, as in Lane’s metal four-poster with a bronze finish that is part of its Marrakesh collection.

With metal beds, too, the watchword is more: more metal and more flamboyant curves and curlicues.