where to buy a mattress in md

where to buy a mattress in md

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Where To Buy A Mattress In Md

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5000 N. 27th Street 27th Street, North of Superior 10240 W 29th St N #112 Maize Rd and West 29th St N 555 S. Hoover Rd. Ste #1600 Dugan Exit Off Kellogg 2413 N Greenwich Rd, Suite 115 K-96 and Greenwich by Cabela's & Target 119 N 72nd St Be the first to review 1/2 Block North of Dodge 2820 Richard Joseph Blvd. I-44 & Rangeline Rd. Next to Cracker Barrel 1750 S Sheridan, Just N of 21st St 4206 Centerplace Drive Suite 718 Between Best Buy and Sports Authority 4298 S. Parker Rd. 10800 East 45th Ave. I-70 & Havana St.There are several ways to purchase products from The Original Mattress Factory. If you are nearby one of our factory or store locations, we encourage you to stop in and see us. You are often able to take the product home with you right away or you can schedule pick-up or home delivery for a later date. For those of you living further away, we can ship to you via common carrier. Take The Product With You:




Our factory showrooms typically stock all of our standard size models. Our store locations carry limited stock, but can have almost any product transferred to them within a few days. Please call a store near you for more information regarding proper pick-up procedures. We offer home delivery service in our local areas for a nominal charge. This delivery charge includes set-up of your Original Mattress products in your home. We can remove your old mattresses and box spring as well, but terms of service vary by location. In some markets, we have extended our home delivery service to outlying areas for an additional fee. Delivery turnaround is typically within 2-3 days, but frequency to certain areas also varies by location. Please contact a store near you for specific information on delivery charges, timing and policies. For anyone living outside our local delivery areas, we can ship our mattresses to most states within the continental U.S. There are two different types of shipping that are available:




Common Carrier Delivery: This is a tailgate delivery, so you will need to take the product(s) off the back of the truck and make arrangements to carry them into your home. Tailgate does not include removal of old mattresses and box springs. It typically takes 1-2 weeks for delivery. Home Delivery: Inside home delivery is also available in most areas. This means that the product(s) will be unloaded and taken inside the home for you. Removal is usually available for an additional charge. It typically takes 3-4 weeks for delivery. Please contact us for more information, as we will need to know the number of pieces (mattress, box spring or set), size, model and destination zip code in order to provide an estimate on shipping cost. Since we feel the best way to purchase a bed is to visit our store and try out the various models to find the one that suits you best, we encourage you to visit one of our locations to purchase your mattress set. If you are unable to do so or have purchased from us in the past and know what you need, we do accept phone orders.




We accept the following methods of payment: cash, check, American Express, Discover, MasterCard and Visa. Please visit or call a store near you for more details. We deliver to several colleges and universities in the following states: Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and the Washington D.C area. Please contact any location for further details and pricing.For many of us, it’s about 40 prone, self-conscious seconds, clothes on, in a showroom, staring into a fluorescent light, followed by an “I’ll take it” that’s more about relief than approval. But wait, there’s not a lot of relief, because the markup on mattresses is mysterious enough that it’s impossible to know if you’ve been taken or not. And your 40-second test didn’t tell you much anything about whether this is a good location for you to sleep, fuck, and scan Twitter for the next two decades. That’s why a new approach to selling mattresses is so novel, and so welcome.




Casper is one of these new-age businesses. Based in New York City, it doesn’t have a showroom. It ships the mattress to you, in a compact box. That’s right: Your mattress comes to your house in a box via UPS! You cut along the dotted line and—voila!—like a pool toy or a Stephen A. Smith diatribe, the mattress inflates. You position it on the bed, and then comes the really relaxing part: You have 100 days to decide if it’s the mattress for you. This approach marks Casper—and a similar rival, Leesa—as part of the new wave of consumer goods sellers with a decidedly consumer-first focus. Think Warby Parker and Netflix. The queen-sized example Casper sent to my home goes for $850, with a $50 discount coupon floating on the Web, which is very competitive for a good mattress. In fact, if it lasts as long as my previous mattress (20 years), it'll be a stinking bargain. (Casper does offer a 10-year warranty on top of the 100-day evaluation period, and claims that to sell the same product in stores it would need to charge three times more.




Some of the latex mattress makers offer a 25-year warranty.) So the big question: Is this mattress any good? I put it through its paces for 30 wintry nights, then spoke with the Men’s Health sleep expert, Dr. C. William Winter, about what I learned and what you should be thinking about when you pick a mattress. (Check out the Best Sleep Positions to find out what the way you sleep says about you.) It wasn’t that long ago that nearly all mattresses were built around coiled springs. There were outliers, like the Temper-Pedic (memory foam) and Sleep Numbers (air bladder) brands that you likely heard marketed on the radio, but it was a world dominated by Serta, Sealy, and Simmons. That’s changed to a degree in recent years, with non-spring-based mattresses increasing their market share. There are air-bladder-based mattresses, like those made by Sleep Number. They promise endless adjustability. You can change the amount of air in the bladder on a daily—heck, hourly—basis.




But most people don’t want endless change; they want to set it and forget it, for a long period of time. On the negative side, the mechanical nature of the air bladder introduces the ability for your mattress to “break." A latex mattress is another option. Its selling points: personalization, durability, and eco-friendliness. "The cool thing [about latex mattresses] is that they are completely customizable,” says Winter, who sleeps on one, from Savvy Rest. “You could have a mattress split down the middle, where your side is different than your partner’s side. And the absence of springs means one less thing that can wear out. "Theoretically, the mattress never needs to be replaced. If part of it wore out or needed to be replaced, you could simply open the liner and replace the faulty layer with a new piece, which isn’t terribly expensive,” says Winter. He adds: “If your needs change or your preferences change—or your partner changes—you can unzip the mattress and pull her layers out, and throw them out, and get new layers for your new girlfriend."




Memory foam mattresses—like Tempur-Pedic—are celebrated for their body-enveloping support. People with back pain often sing their praises. On the other hand, that enveloping can make them uncomfortable on hot nights and can make moving around on the mattress difficult. And sometimes it’s very important that we be able to move around on our mattresses. “It’s like screwing on a marshmallow,” Dr. Winter writes in an email about foam mattresses in general, adding, "I unfortunately have to disagree with the band Spinal Tap's conclusion, 'The bigger the cushion, the sweeter the pushin’.’ The Casper is a bit of a hybrid, with a latex layer on top and the memory foam underneath. You get the benefits of both, Casper claims. What you lose, though, by purchasing from a startup with a lean business model and an eye on costs, is the ability to customize it. Large, deep, cushy mattresses have taken the market by storm in recent years, with some exceeding 14 inches in depth.




Dr. Winter said that while the plush tops no doubt feel very comfortable, a lot of factors go into what’s right for you. The Casper is just 10 inches thick, with a 1 1/2-inch synthetic latex layer atop a 1 1/2 inch layer, this one of memory foam, with 7 inches of foam as a base.  The Leesa has a similar mattress, which was just redesigned (and a similar 100-day vetting period). Even if you go to the independent mattress seller’s store and put in the Consumer Reports' recommended 10 minutes of lying-around time, you’re not going to know much till you sleep a night on the darn thing. When you do, you might find the mattress is too firm and hurts your back, or what was pleasingly plush in the showroom is claustrophobically enveloping or sweat pore-dilatingly hot in the wee hours. In fact, the only thing that Dr. Winter recommends in purchasing a new mattress is that you have a guaranteed window to return or replace it. “I’d avoid a mattress deal or a mattress dealership that says you buy, you own it,” Winter says.




“You can’t just sit there, lie flat on your back in your street clothes, and say this is the mattress for me for the next X number of years. “I’d encourage guys to work out a deal so the mattress can always come back in, at least, the first month." While a 100-night trial period is great marketing, my experience was that it took about a week to make a decision. My first couple nights with the Casper were a bit off-putting. I had, strangely enough, grown accustomed to the trench that ran through the middle of our bed from 20 years of sleeping with my wife. Gravity—and our great love for each other, honey—pulled at us inexorably each evening. If we didn’t come together, it was because someone didn’t want to. And sleeping close to each other has its benefits. Recent research showed that couples that slept within touching distance of each other got more, better rest. By Night #3 we were past the newness of it, and we settled in. Casper’s latex-over-memory foam construction gives it some of what Dr. Winter calls that “reinserted into the womb” feeling.




At the same time, the latex is firm enough that you—and your sex life—aren’t swallowed by it. After a week on the Casper, my wife said that a pain she had been feeling in her leg and hip through the fall had gone away. "I know people who say they bought a mattress and the back pain they had for 10 years went away; I believe it,” he says. “I went on a trip to the Midwest and slept on a hotel mattress for two nights and my back never hurt worse.  People often wake up after a bad night’s sleep and say, ‘Oh, my back’s all locked up and I have sciatica or whatever. It definitely works the other way, too.' All in all, we're sold—for now. The Casper is plenty comfortable, and we’re sleeping soundly, night after night. If you’re in the market, check out your options; the perfect matters for you is a very personal decision, and the mattress market is anything but tired these days, with competitors including Casper,  Leesa, and the dial-it-in latex mattress folks offering alternatives and competitive pricing to the coiled spring firms that dominate the market.

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