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Distributor Overstocks, Closeouts & Factory Select Inventory NH Furniture Direct is a wholesale Furniture and Mattress Clearance Center. Located in Tax Free Nashua, NH. We offer a complete line of mattresses, bedroom sets, kitchen sets,pub tables,  living room sets ( leather & microfiber), sectionals, bunk beds, trundle beds, futons, entertainment centers, and more.  Everything is 30-60% off retail store prices all with factory warranties!!We are not a store, stock is limited!  Come early for the best selection.  We are open to the public.Everything is a first come first serve basis. Pick-up or Delivery is available!WE ARE IN TAX FREE  NASHUA NEW HAMPSHIREClick the Red Marker Below for DirectionsHours:Sunday March 5th: 11am-5pmMonday March 6th: 10am-5pmMonday: CLOSEDTuesday: 10am - 5pmWednesday: 10am - 5pmThursday: 10am - 7pmFriday: 10am - 7pmSaturday: 10am - 6pmSunday: CLOSEDSpecialsSee our "Sales and Specials" page for details on our FREE Mountain Bike promotion... SOFA SALE GOING ON NOWMattresses 30%-60% off retail!  




Memory FoamQuilted queen set $250!Full size sets start at $175All sizes and styles availableBunk Beds start at $169Bedroom Sets start at $850Table Sets start at $199Sofa & Love seat start at $599Sectionals starting at $599Futons start at $199Now featuring occasion tables, sectionals & bar stools. There’s no more important piece of furniture in your home than a mattress. Get it wrong and a poor night’s sleep can single-handedly ruin the outcome of the next day and, long term, wreak havoc on your body. Thanks to the current crop of bed-in-a-box mattress brands, it’s never been easier to replace your lumpy spring bed or that futon contraption from college, with a slab of polyurethane memory foam that conforms to both back and slide sleepers. Foam mattresses have been around for years but, thanks in part to the middleman markup, they cost thousands. A new breed of upstart company sells direct to the consumer, lowering the cost, while upping the quality and getting rid of that hot, sunken feeling that plagued older foam beds.




Worried about making an investment like this without taking one for a test ride in the store? Don't be — most of these brands offer a 100 night in-home trial and return policy. We slept on five king-size polyurethane memory foam beds over a two-month period. Here’s how we felt in the morning.YogabedThe first thing we noticed after unboxing the Yogabed is how insanely comfortable the removable cover is. The 50/50 synthetic and natural fiber blend is similar to what is used to make temperature-sensitive athletic clothing. It's designed to evaporate moisture on warm nights to keep you dry, and act as a thin insulation barrier on cold nights to keep the bed warm. Then we noticed how heavy it is at 110 pounds — only one mattress weighed more — which made us wish the cover included stitched-in handles, which no brand seems to think is important. Made from four foam layers here in the United States, the bed was very responsive. Depressions made by the body fill in almost immediately, so there is none of that swallowed-up-by-the-mattress feeling.




That’s good news for those who spend a lot of time rolling over at night. Under the covers the bed was a comfortable cooling temperature. It fell in the middle of the road for bounciness, so while sex is easier compared to a typical foam mattress, you might be disturbed by someone else’s late-night visit to the restroom. It's covered by a 10-year warranty and comes with two foam pillows. EveThe three layers that make up the Eve provided the most bounce out of the mattresses tested, a real boon during sex, but probably less so if your partner is a constant toss and turner. At 120 pounds, the U.K.-imported mattress was the heaviest (still no handles!) and felt like the firmest, which might be most comfortable to back sleepers. The mattress is designed with cooling in mind, including holes in the layers to help move body heat away, which made for a comfortable sleep. The comfortable cover zips up on three sides and sort of slips over the mattress like a sock, so it wasn’t the easiest to deal with.




After unboxing, Eve had the most noticeable off-gassing smell, though it went away after a few hours. It's covered by a 10-year warranty. LeesaThe U.S.-made Leesa was the most unique mattress we tested. The three layers combine to offer bounce — enough to encourage a 5-year-old to keep reaching for the ceiling — with the lower layers having the moldability of a traditional foam mattress. The lightest bed in the roundup (90 pounds), we felt cradled but not enveloped, yet it was firm at the same time. The foam seemed to handle motion transfer well when someone got out of the bed. The polyester-lycra cover was the most comfortable tested — we preferred them to our own sheets, in fact. Tuft & NeedleWhen we buried our nose into the Tuft & Needle, we detected a faint soap smell, which we didn’t mind. The comfortable cover is easy to remove, and it has the beefiest zipper in the bunch. Similar to the Yogabed, this SoCal-manufactured mattress had a good mix of bounce and responsiveness and is decidedly on the firmer side.




The brand has brick-and-mortar stores in San Francisco and Phoenix for those looking for a test drive and a website that explains traditional bed markups. Sleep InnovationsThis brand’s Taylor mattress is distributed through Amazon (and is subject to a 30-day return policy, not the 100 nights the other brands offer), and was by far the softest in the roundup. At 12 inches thick, two more than the rest of the field, body impressions took nearly five seconds to fill in, which made this the bed for those who like the molding aspect of a foam mattress. But there is none of that trapped-heat feeling associated with earlier foam beds because of the cooling gel infused into the top layer. While it’s made in the United States, the fit and finish of the cover left something to be desired: seams were coming undone out of the box and the zipper didn’t have a pull tab. The cover is also difficult to get back onto the mattress. It's covered by a 20-year warranty. iPhone 8: Here’s Everything You Need to Know




This New Lexus Coupe Pisses Off Honda Drivers 10 Great Minimalist Watches Meet the Holy Grail of Retro Gaming Consoles The Most Insane Jeep Wrangler Money Can Buy Until fairly recently, shopping for a new mattress was a pain in the ass. You went to the store, found one you liked, bought it, then were tasked with getting it home, up the stairs and through the doorway. That, or you paid extra for someone to do the chore for you. The arrival of mail-order mattress companies changed that. Over the past couple of years, direct-to-consumer startups have jumped on the mail-order bandwagon, offering premium mattresses at an affordable price by tossing the brick-and-mortar store model. These mattresses come rolled up, packaged in a compact vertical box, and shipped directly to your home. The hardest part now is deciphering what makes each of these companies’ mattresses unique. So for three months — the average trial period for most mail-order mattress companies — we tasked members of our editorial staff with finding the nuances of today’s best mail-order mattresses, and we compiled their experiences into this handy survey.




If you’re in the market for a mattress (which, if you haven’t bought one in the past seven years, you are) and scratching your head over which is right for you, start here. Most Universal Mattress: Leesa appeals to people who don’t want to think too much about their sleeping habits. Apart from sizes, the brand offers just one mattress option, but a good one: the mattress is 10 inches thick and consists of three layers, encased with a polyester-blended fabric that can be washed and replaced. At the bottom, a dense, six-inch-thick support layer prevents the dreaded sinking-in sensation, while sandwiched between these two layers is two inches of memory foam that contours to the body. It’s not too soft, not too firm, and after three months, I haven’t had an issue with the temperature. To put it simply, it feels just right. And that’s enough to keep me sleeping happy. Most Health-Conscious Mattress: Free of harmful chemicals (such as fire retardants, phthalates and heavy metals), the handmade Coronado mattress by Brentwood Home has all the elements of understated luxury.




The outward appearance is neutral, featuring tweed sides and a Eurotop cushion, but inside, the lining of the mattress incorporates a layer of New Zealand wool, a moisture-wicking natural fire barrier. The quilted top is made from a Belgian knit that offers four-way stretch, offering your body less resistance when you relax into the bed at night. The mattress has a three-layer design: a six-inch therapeutic base foam is topped with three inches of Airlux ventilation foam (keeping your mattress cool) and three inches of gel memory foam. The multi-layer design offered relief from back pain I frequently experienced with other mattresses, and though the bed is billed as “medium feel” it offers a high amount of support. The bed doesn’t absorb ambient heat on warm nights in New York City, and it offers just enough of a plush touch to feel luxurious without feeling like you’re enveloped in a pillow. Best Custom Mattress: Helix blows out the custom mattress process. Height, age, weight, physique, average sleep position, preferred mattress firmness and “Do you get hot at night?” all are on the questionnaire.




And that’s just if you sleep alone. If you have a significant other, you have to declare their side of the bed and answer similar questions. Taking all that in to account, Helix then adjusts the amount of specific material and where each layer appears throughout the mattress. After going through the whole process and getting some of the best nights’ sleep I’ve had in years, it’s hard to understand what other mattress companies are charging you for — and why custom isn’t standard. Best for NYC and L.A. Residents: Similar to the Leesa, Casper is topped with a foam that doesn’t trap heat and provides a little spring — in Casper’s case, it’s latex — with memory and support foam underneath. You’ll immediately notice the firmness (it combats that sinking feeling symptomatic of old memory foam mattresses), and your back will thank you. Most notably, residents of NYC and L.A. have a chance to go to brick-and-mortar showrooms in order to try the mattress before they buy it, which gives a happy medium to the online retail savings and showroom convenience.




— J. Travis Smith Best for Active Lifestyles: I have a baseline amount of shoulder/back tension because of (a) anxiety, and (b) life with a standing desk. Similarly, my girlfriend waits tables. We’re not an ultramarathoner couple like Bear’s ideal demo, but we’re city-dweller active. So, Bear’s fitness-focused tech proved virtue in excess. Whereas I used to spend my mornings in a full-body clench, six to eight hours a night on Bear’s Graphite-Gel Infused Memory Foam regularly smoothes out nigh every wrinkle in my musculature. Likewise, whereas I used to sleep with one leg exposed more often than not, the Thermo-reactive Celiant fiber has kept us comfy, even easing us through a three-week stint without an air conditioner — in June. I feel good enough to half-seriously consider marathon training. Best No-Frills Mattress: To be honest, I’m not picky about my mattress. I sleep comfortably on almost anything from rock hard to pillowy soft. The Eve mattress sits on the firmer side of the spectrum, but only barely.




The biggest complaint that I hear about foam mattresses is overheating in the summer, but the Eve had no such problems. The Eve has cooling memory foam that helps to regulate temperature, and while I didn’t sleep any cooler in comparison to my regular mattress, I didn’t sleep any hotter either. In other words, it works, and the straightforward convenience becomes the selling point. Best Soft Mattress for Side Sleepers: Cocoon is available in soft (“in-the-bed”) or firm (“on-the-bed”) varieties. It’s good to have options, and though both mattresses of course feature typical memory foam give, there is a distinct difference between the two. I chose soft, which I found had a more luxurious, cloud-like feel. Though still quite firm, the “softness” is most discernible at the edges, where my body sinks in as I sit upright, and still I only sink a few inches. Still, it’s helpful: I’m a side sleeper, and the extra give over a firmer mattress is very conducive to a good night’s rest.

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