Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Bed

Encyclopedia : B : BE : BED : Bed


A double bed
Enlarge
A double bed

A bed is a piece of furniture or location primarily used or intended for sleeping upon, but also commonly used for sexual activities, relaxing, sitting, watching television, and reading.

Beds come in a wide array of shapes and sizes. Early beds were little more than piles of straw or some other natural materials. An important change was raising them off the ground, to avoid drafts, dirt, and pests.

To make beds more comfortable the top layer is frequently a mattress. Originally these were bags of straw for most people and filled with feathers for the wealthy. Eventually new fillings such as cotton and artificial fillers became common. In modern times most mattresses use springs, solid foam, water, or air.

At the top of the mattress, to provide greater support for the head, most people use a pillow. Also used is some form of covering blanket to provide warmth to the sleeper, often bed sheets, a quilt, or a duvet.

The bed frame may simply be made of wood or metal, but many also use springs. Most expensive and bulky, but also strong and comfortable is a box spring or divan, a large mattress-sized box containing wood and springs. A dust ruffle, bed skirt, or valance sheet may be used to make the bed frame match the rest of the bedding.

History

Ancient Rome

Ancient Romans had various kinds of beds for repose. These included:

Bed sizes

Most countries have a standard set of four sizes of mattress. While the Double size appears to be standard among English speaking countries, based on the imperial measurement of 4 ftin by 6 ft 3 in, the sizes for other bed types tend to vary. The European sizes differ; they are based on the metric system.

A king-sized bed differs from the other sizes in implementation, as it is not common to have a king-sized box spring; rather, two smaller box-springs are used under a king-sized mattress. On a U.S. Standard or "Eastern" King, the boxsprings are identical in size to a Twin Extra-Long.

Standard sizes

Modern manufacturing conventions have resulted in a limited number of standard sizes of commercial bedding for mattresses and box springs. They vary somewhat by country of origin.

U.S. UK Australia Europe
Single, Twin 39 in × 75 in 36 in × 75 in 36 in × 75 in 36 in × 79 in
m × 1.9 m 0.9 m × 1.9 m 0.9 m × 1.9 m 0.9 m × 2 m
Double, Full 54 in × 75 in 54 in × 75 in 54 in × 75 in 55 in × 79 in
1.35 m × 1.9 m 1.35 m × 1.9 m 1.35 m × 1.9 m 1.4 m × 2 m
Queen 60 in × 80 in 60 in × 78 in 60 in × 80 in 63 in × 79 in
1.5 m × 2.05 m 1.5 m × 2 m 1.5 m × 2.05 m 1.6 m × 2 m
King, (Super King) 76 in × 80 in 72 in × 78 in 72 in × 80 in 71 in × 79 in
1.95 m × 2.05 m 1.85 m × 2 m 1.85 m × 2.05 m 1.8 m × 2 m
Width by length. Metric sizes (Europe) rounded to nearest half decimetre; inch sizes (U.S., UK, Australia) rounded to nearest inch.

The sizes in the UK, other than the Double, vary compared to the U.S. sizes, being generally smaller. The U.S. Queen corresponds to UK King and King to Super King. The European or continental basic sizes are similar to the UK but have a set length of 2 metres.

These dimensions are for the mattress—the actual bed frame will be a little bigger in order to fully encompass and support the mattress. The thickness of the mattress may vary considerably.

In some places (including China) and historically, Single referred to a bed size that was half the width of a Double, that is, approximately the width of one pillow. In nations with better nutrition (and hence larger citizens) and greater wealth, such beds have become quite rare, making a Twin be the standard for one-person sleeping. Without another common use for the term Single and with the term Double being widely used, Single has come to be another term for a twin bed in these places. The change in terminology has been used (and perhaps promoted) by people involved in retail bed sales to be able to say to customers that a double is "only 15 inches wider than a single bed," which is sometimes a point made to encourage customers to purchase a more expensive queen-sized bed. Note that portable cots are generally the size of original single beds.

Other U.S. sizes

Twin Extra Long
39 in × 80 in (1 m × 2.05 m)
This size is fairly popular in college dormitories.
Three Quarter
48 in × 75 in (1.2 m × 1.9 m)
This size is considered obsolete by the major manufacturers.
Olympic Queen
66 in × 80 in (1.7 m × 2.05 m)
California Queen
60 in × 84 in (1.5 m × 2.15 m)
Eastern King
76 in × 80 in (2 m × 2.05 m)
This is the same as a U.S. King.
California King
72 in × 84 in (1.85 m × 2.15 m)
This is the standard king size on the West Coast of the United States, and is sometimes called the West Coast King or WC King.

Other UK sizes

Small Single
30 in × 75 in (0.75 m × 1.9 m)
Super Single
41 in × 75 in (1.05 m × 1.9 m)
Three Quarter
48 in × 75 in (1.2 m × 1.9 m)

Other European sizes

Extra Small Single
0.75 m × 2 m (29½ in × 78¾ in)
Small Single
0.8 m × 2 m (31½ in × 78¾ in)
Large Single
1 m × 2 m (39½ in × 78¾ in)

Types of bed

There are many varieties of bed:

References

  1. This article incorporates content from the 1728 Cyclopaedia, a publication in the public domain. [link]

See also

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: