Homes & Antiques

Buying an antique bed

Louise Bacou, founder of La Maison London, offers advice…

- La Maison London lamaisonlo­ndon.com

PROPORTION­S: Antique beds come in many sizes and proportion­s, so choose one that works with the dimensions of your bedroom. As a general rule, rooms with ceilings higher than their depth and width can take beds that mirror those proportion­s: high headboards, four-posters, lit à la polonaise or beds with canopies can all work in these spaces. If the room’s proportion­s are more contempora­ry, choose a bed with a headboard that is wider than its height, such as Italian designs from the last century, which will work well.

BASE & MATTRESSES: Most antique beds are frames that consist of a headboard, footboard and two sidebars with various different support systems/designs to make up the base.

The frame’s support system is usually either east/west slats, which sit across the frame, or sometimes there is an L-shaped metal bar attached to the sidebars that does the same work. Before an antique bed frame can be used, a base will need to be placed on top of the slats – putting a mattress directly onto the slats won’t give the mattress enough support and also, proportion­ally, the mattress will sit too low in relation to the headboard’s design. A base can be hard top or sprung and is about 6in deep, although some Italian designs, with more contempora­ry, mid-century proportion­s, require a ‘biscuit base’ which is only about 3in deep. Your bed frame supplier will tell you what your bed requires and should either offer the service of making bases and mattresses to size or will have a list of suppliers you can order from directly.

CUT-OUT CORNERS: Beds with curves at the headboard or footboard can look very elegant and feel cosseting to sleep in. If the curves are particular­ly deep, then the base and mattress may need to have ‘cut-out corners’. A template is made of the curve and the base/mattress manufactur­er will then cut them to fit the curves. Most antique bed suppliers are used to this as an option and, again, your frame supplier should guide you through the process to completion.

SIZE: Antique beds come in many sizes, always in multiples of 3in: the springs, traditiona­lly, were 3in so it is possible to find a 4ft 3in, 4ft 6in, 4ft 9in etc. Remember that in deviating from modern ’standard sizes’, buying a base and mattress off the shelf won’t be an option. A good base and mattress supplier can make any size to order. CANE OR UPHOLSTERY: If choosing a cane bed, make sure the cane is in good condition. It can last a long time if looked after properly and always ages gracefully in colour. If the bed is upholstere­d and the fabric looks tired, it can be freshened up with new fabric. As the bed will already have a natural ageing in the patina, choose a fabric to complement this. TRUE SUSTAINABI­LITY: Although there are more things to consider when buying an antique bed than a modern, standard-sized bed, there are real positives to owning an antique piece. Not only can you be part of the creative decision-making on whether it needs restoratio­n and reupholste­ry etc, you will also become part of the bed’s history and it will become part of yours. You can see this journey as true sustainabi­lity: we are looking after well-crafted pieces, caring for them in order to extend their life and usefulness, just as our ancestors did in a pre-industrial age. And that care and attention is returned to us as we live with pieces that age gracefully and beautifull­y and that are a joy to be around.

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