extra firm mattress san francisco

extra firm mattress san francisco

extra firm mattress san diego

Extra Firm Mattress San Francisco

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We believe the best thing you can do for your health and wellness is to get a good night's sleep every night. McRoskey Mattress Company's comfortable, traditionally built mattresses and box springs ensure quality sleep night after night, year after year.  Imagine waking up each morning refreshed on a luxurious McRoskey. We love our mattress! Since sleeping on it, almost all of my back and hip pain has gone away. Wow, what a great improvement and such a joy to sleep now. Every night when we crawl into bed we are very thankful that we are on a McRoskey mattress. It may be the best purchase ever! - Jim and Sharon S. UNIQUE FEATURES & BENEFITS The heart of our mattress comfort is the McRoskey steel innerspring. Its flexible design responsively supports all sleep positions. A mountain of lofty batting, a blend of cotton and polyester fibers, creates wonderfully cushioned and breathable comfort on our two-sided mattress. 100% COTTON TICKING & AIRLETS Woven, all-cotton ticking ensures a cool sleep.




Airlets in the mattress sidewall provide ventilation throughout the mattress. Tufting our two-sided mattresses is a tried and true construction technique that holds layer upon layer of vibrant filling materials in place. McRoskey's flexible edge construction results in comfort extending across the full width of the mattress. It also means our mattresses can be used on adjustable beds, rollaway beds and sofa beds. And it's easy to flip and rotate your mattress. The supportive McRoskey box springs built with steel upholstery coils is 50% of the comfort equation. Don't underestimate the importance of the box spring. For people who prefer a low-profile look, we've designed a Comfort Enhancer Providing box spring benefits for platform and adjustable beds. To see how we make our mattresses, comfort enhancers and box springs, please visit our Factory page. Meet the original: Our Classic design is trusted by generations of loyal customers, and enjoyed by every variety of sleeper.




Available in five comfort choices and adaptable for all For optimal comfort, select a mattress with a box spring. Queen box spring may be built in two pieces, no extra charge. Box spring heights may be increased. Firm box spring may be built as low as 6". Height range from 2.5" to 11". Print a PDF of this page > Your McRoskey mattress and box spring are built to your order at our San Francisco factory. They may be ordered in standard and special sizes. Allow 2-3 weeks fabrication time.  White glove delivery within the San Francisco Bay Area is included.  We can ship almost anywhere in the world. About Us Why Dreamland Bayarea Bayarea Spring Mattress Ruby Ruby Spring Mattress Jade Jade Spring Mattress Dream Dream Spring Mattress DreamLand Memory Foam Pillow DreamLand 701 DreamLand Memory Foam Pillow DreamLand 702 Memory Foam Pillow DreamLand 703 Dreamland  Mattress Inc.
Address:2012 Farallon Drive




              San Leandro, CA 94577
DreamLand to partner with AIT to reach customers nation wide DreamLand Memory Foam Pillow 10 inch memory foam mattress 8 inch memory foam mattress The man who gets paid to jump on mattresses says you can stop laughing now. There is nothing funny about jumping on mattresses day after day. People refuse to understand. "It's work," said professional mattress jumper Reuben Reynoso. "It's not for everybody. There is a right way and a wrong way to do it." Reynoso, who jumps on three mattresses a day, does it the right way. He doesn't try for height. He doesn't go "boing" or turn a somersault. His 10 toes are not little piggies going to market. They are trained members of the team. It's not a trampoline, for goodness sakes, it's a $2,750 mattress. "This is not a game," said Reynoso, bouncing up and down. Jumping on a mattress is one of the final steps in making a handmade mattress or, to be more precise, a hand-and-foot-made mattress.




It may be true that machines, which can be made to do most things, can be made to jump on a mattress. But a machine cannot do what Reynoso and his toes can do, which is to expertly compress no fewer than 28 layers of fluffy cotton batting while seeking to detect pea-size mattress lumps or other imperfections, the kind that can give insomnia to fairy-tale princesses and real-world princesses, too. Reynoso does his jumping in the McRoskey mattress factory on Potrero Hill. McRoskey has been stomping out high-end mattresses in San Francisco for 112 years and is something of a cult among mattress fanciers. Waterbeds, plastic foam, inflatables and other mattress upstarts come and go. McRoskey mattress bouncers keep bouncing along, even surviving the 1906 earthquake. The company turns out only a dozen or so mattresses per day. The other afternoon, Reynoso was putting the finishing touches on an extra-firm queen mattress, which did not really become extra firm until Reynoso was done with his jumping.




First, a thick protective mat goes over the mattress in progress, as the scent of Reynoso's feet is not really what the customer is paying $2,700 for. Then Reynoso steps onto the middle of one edge and jumps five steps forward and five steps back. He works a precise grid pattern, covering each section of the surface once, like an Augusta groundskeeper mowing the 18th green before the Masters. "I try to ... get my heart ... pumping just ... a bit," he said, between bounces.Flip the mattress over and jump 100 more jumps on the other side. In mattress bouncing, moderation is all. Too many bounces and the cotton batting winds up either too compressed or punctured. Too few bounces and either the mattress will not fit into the giant stitching machine for the final sewing, or an errant lump could get through and require a complete makeover. Reynoso knows he has the job of his and many other men's dreams. As a kid growing up in Hawaii, he and his three brothers did not bounce.




His father was a Marine officer, and any mattress bouncing was met with corporal punishment from the sergeant. But while mattress stomping may look like fun - something like the fabled "I Love Lucy" episode with Lucy stomping grapes in a giant wine barrel - it's only fun if you don't have to do it. Reynoso and his colleagues have to do it, and they have to do it carefully and circumspectly. There is no room for error. Mattress making turns out to be something of a delicate operation. The jumping part is only the last step - Reynoso and his colleagues assemble each mattress by hand from the coils out, laying the delicate, fluffy layers of cotton-polyester batting atop the core of coils one by one, as if assembling a wedding cake. The individual layers of batting feel like cotton candy and are just as easy to rip. They must be handled like souffles or plutonium. Poke a hole in a layer of batting, and you must start all over. Reynoso learned his lesson the hard way early in his career and now picks up and lays down the batting with open palms, to avoid pinching with his thumbs.




After nearly three dozen layers are in position, top and bottom, the whole thing - at this stage looking something like a giant hero sandwich - is crunched together and held in place with 40 giant safety pins. (Attached to the giant sandwich at this stage is the running gag of the mattress business - the government tag that lists the fiber content and says it must not be removed "under penalty of law." The warning applies only to manufacturers, not customers. There are no mattress tag police searching bedrooms for missing mattress tags.) Then, after the bouncing, comes the final stitching on a giant sewing machine that looks like a band saw but applies a precise line of thread to within a 1/16 -inch tolerance. Any greater than that and the inspectors won't sign off on the mattress, which means Reynoso and his fellow assemblers must take the thing apart and start all over. As offbeat and old school as the job may be, Reynoso says it suits him just fine. He used to be a carpenter, roofer, construction worker, railroad engineer and maker of corn syrup.




None of those jobs, he said, provided the satisfaction of making a mattress. It's a product that, unlike corn syrup, will be an intimate part of a customer's life for decades. After making his third mattress of the day, Reynoso lay down upon it and closed his eyes and gave his handiwork final approval. "It just feels good to make one of these," he said. "Sleep is so important. Everybody in the world has to do it. I like being a part of that." How to tell if you need a new mattress After a house, a car and a funeral, a mattress is perhaps the most expensive thing most people buy. It's time to get a new one, according to the mattress industry:-- If your mattress sags-- If it's uncomfortable-- If you wake up tired or fidgety-- If you sleep better on another bed than on your own-- If you feel lumps-- If the interior of the mattress is starting to poke outBut according to medical experts, the quality of sleep decreases as a person ages and an expensive new mattress will not prevent its owner from getting older.

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