The answer to the question I posed yesterday was, of course, really very prosaic: the mattresses were
actually of pretty poor quality. We discovered this about eighteen
months after we had finished furnishing the house. The beds and
mattresses had been bought from a large chain store through its web site
so we had no opportunity to see the quality of the goods before they
were delivered. There was a double bed for the ground floor bedroom,
and two singles to go upstairs. They had to be singles as we would
never have got a double bed up the stairs, although I suppose it could
have been hauled in through the window on the end of a length of rope.
Whether
or not the beds we bought are typically French, I couldn’t say. I do
know they are not typically English. They start off just the same, with
the head and foot being joined by side pieces, but then they start to
differ. The French beds then have an inner metal frame that is
supported by lengths of timber placed between the side pieces of the
wooden frame. This has timber slats fixed across it, these slats having
been placed in position under tension so that they are bowed upwards,
thus providing springs.
The mattress is simply a piece
of cotton-covered foam rubber, about six inches thick. One advantage of
this is that the mattress warms up very quickly on cold nights, but of
course foam rubber also starts to compress after comparatively little
use. After less than two years we needed to replace the mattresses, and
that was after they had been used only lightly. Presumably this is why
every French market has its mattress seller.
~~~~~
Another view of the market at Chateaubriant.
2 comments:
Great picture, BP!
Foam rubber breaks down so easily. Horrible choice for mattresses (unless it's for a temporary use, maybe for a sleeping place for guests who will not be using the bed much more often than once every couple of months, then I suppose it would make a decent inexpensive choice.)
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