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Beds with storage and upholstered headboards

Single, double and king-size beds from 90 to 180 cm wide, with slat bases and versions featuring lift-up storage, drawers or upholstered headboards. Over twenty models in oak, white gloss and neutral fabric finishes, from around €100 to roughly €900.

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Beds from 90 to 180 cm wide for children's, single and double bedrooms, with slat bases included and options that add storage through lift-up bases, low drawers or upholstered headboards. The catalogue brings together more than twenty models in oak finishes (Monastery, April, Sonoma, Wotan, Artisan, Flagstaff, Riviera), white gloss, graphite and neutral grey or beige upholstery, with prices from around €100 for single sizes to roughly €900 for continental beds with storage.

Bed types: single, double, with storage and upholstered

Single beds such as Balder 90 and Winer 100 are the usual choice for children's rooms, guest bedrooms or small flats, with 90 or 100 cm mattress widths and compact frames. Double and king beds cover the most-requested standard sizes — 140, 160 and 180 cm wide — and make up most of the catalogue, with models like Kassel, Forn, Tetrix, Hesen, Kent or Bergen. Upholstered beds (Nedin, Lones, Cosala III, Reve) replace board headboards with fabric-covered structures, while the versions with lift-up storage or drawers (Frija, Forn 160, Saturn, Tetrix, Ostia, Kassel B1) add storage volume directly beneath the mattress.

Standard sizes: 90, 100, 140, 160 and 180 cm

All beds come with a mattress length of 200 cm, matching the European standard of 90×200, 100×200, 140×200, 160×200 and 180×200. The difference between 140 and 160 cm is very practical: two people share a 160 cm bed comfortably, while 140 cm suits couples short on space or works as a guest bed. The 180 cm size functions as a king-style solution and needs at least 3 m of free wall length so that bedside tables fit on both sides without blocking the path. Always measure the actual recess before choosing: the mattress width should be increased by 5 to 25 cm to account for the frame, since the headboard or upholstery extends the outline (for example, a Lones 160×200 occupies a total width of 181 cm).

Beds with lift-up storage and low drawers

The lift-up storage base offers the best storage value in small flats: the slat platform rises on gas pistons and reveals an internal volume around 30–45 cm deep, large enough for duvets, seasonal clothing, pillows or small suitcases. In the catalogue this function is covered by models such as Frija, Forn 160 and Reve, the latter built in continental format with a tall headboard. Low drawers are the alternative when faster, more frequent access is needed: Saturn includes three side drawers, Hesen and Tetrix add one or two at the foot, and Kassel B1 replaces the open base with a complete storage box. The practical difference is that the lift-up base hides contents more thoroughly but requires raising the mattress each time; drawers open with a handle and don't force you to move the bedding.

Upholstered beds and headboards: fabrics, heights and comfort

Upholstered beds replace the rigid headboard with a padded fabric piece, usually in neutral tones — grey on Nedin and Lones, beige on Reve and Cosala III — that combine with almost any bedroom palette. The advantage is twofold: they cushion contact with the wall, which matters in older flats with thin partitions, and they let you read or watch a series in bed without needing extra cushions. Headboard height conditions visual presence a lot: on Kaspian it barely reaches 35 cm and leaves the wall almost clear, while on Lones or Reve it rises above 110 cm and becomes the dominant element of the room. If the bed sits in front of a low window or a picture, low headboards — between 35 and 60 cm — are the better choice to avoid covering them.

Wood finishes and upholstery

The oak finishes cover the whole tonal range: Monastery and April in deep browns, Sonoma and Wotan in warm honey tones, Artisan in pronounced rustic, Flagstaff and Riviera in aged greys. White gloss remains an option for small bedrooms because it visually widens the wall, and graphite (Hesen, Saturn) works in contemporary interiors with light walls. The upholstery uses chenille-type fabric or light corduroy, durable for everyday use; check each model's sheet to confirm whether the cover is removable and washable. All boards are moisture and wear-resistant, with soft-close hinges on doors and metal runners on drawers.

How to choose your bed for the room

The basic personal-fit rule is to keep the bed at least 10–15 cm longer than the tallest person who will sleep in it; the standard 200 cm length covers heights up to 1.85 m. On the room plan, leave 60 to 70 cm of clear walkway around the bed to open drawers, make the bed or reach the nightstands. If the room is smaller than 3×3 m, a 140 cm double makes more sense than forcing in a 160 cm one. If the bed includes a lift-up base, consider the opening direction — front or side — and leave at least one metre clear in front so the base lifts without hitting the wall. For children's or teen bedrooms, the 90 cm versions with slat bases (Balder, Kaspian) are the most practical: sturdy, easy to dress and compatible with most mattresses on the market.

Delivery across Spain and home assembly

Beds are delivered flat-packed with screws, fittings and an instruction manual included. Assembly takes between one and three hours depending on the model: structures with board headboards and slat bases go together with a screwdriver and an Allen key, while versions with a lift-up base require building the box first and then fitting the gas pistons, a step best done with two people. We ship throughout the peninsula and the Balearic Islands with free shipping from €300, and answer pre-purchase queries about sizes, mattress compatibility or the opening direction of the lift-up base.