

The 10 Best Luxury Beds
Words: Gentleman's Journal
There comes a moment in every gentleman's life when he must confront a hard truth: the most important thing in his home is not his whisky collection, his turntable, or even his tailor. It is his bed.
Because the bed, that great silent companion, is where the real work of refinement occurs. It is where the ideas form, where the body repairs, where the day begins and ends in equal grandeur. It is also, incidentally, where one spends nearly a third of one's existence. So why, one wonders, do so many people sleep on something that looks and feels like a punishment?
The luxury bed, that rarefied piece of craftsmanship, is not simply a mattress upon a frame. It is the culmination of heritage, engineering, natural materials, and a quietly sensual design philosophy that borders on artistry. To sleep on such a bed is to wake up not merely rested but restored.
So, in the spirit of intelligent indulgence, allow us to introduce ten of the world's finest creations in the noble art of sleep.
Savoir Beds: The Crown Jewel of Sleep
Let us begin, as all good things do, with Savoir. This London house of hand-crafted excellence was founded in 1905 to furnish the Savoy Hotel. Ever since, Savoir Beds has become synonymous with the uppermost echelon of slumber. These are not simply beds; they are legacies.
Each one is made to order in London and Wales, taking over 120 hours to build. The artisans hand-tie their springs, layer horsetail, wool, and Mongolian cashmere, and stitch every seam by hand. A Savoir bed is so individual that no two are alike.
Their flagship model, the No. 1, is the bed equivalent of a Rolls-Royce Phantom parked quietly in your bedroom. It costs around forty-five thousand pounds, though that figure feels almost reasonable once you experience its suspension-like comfort. It is not about extravagance. It is about equilibrium.
The Savoy itself still uses them, and so do those who understand that luxury is not loud. Sleeping on a Savoir bed is like floating through silk clouds. To own one is to understand the fine line between necessity and indulgence, and to cross it with grace.
Hästens: Swedish Precision and Equestrian Dreams
From London, we move to Sweden, where Hästens has been producing beds since 1852. They began as saddle-makers, which may explain their long-standing obsession with horsehair. Their craftsmen still weave and layer it into every mattress, creating natural ventilation that keeps the bed cool and buoyant.
The Hästens Vividus, their crowning glory, is a masterpiece of understatement. It takes more than two hundred hours to build, uses only natural materials, and is priced somewhere in the realm of a small London flat. But those who own one claim it changes their relationship with sleep entirely.
The company's signature blue-check pattern has become a quiet mark of connoisseurship. A Hästens bed does not shout for attention. It simply waits for you, perfectly aligned, like a private jet ready for take-off.
Vispring: The British Institution of Refined Rest
Vispring, founded in 1901, was the first company to pioneer the pocket spring system now copied worldwide. The name refers to the number of coils in each spring, each one individually wrapped and hand-nested for support.
A Vispring bed is a study in balance. The Sublime Superb, one of its most popular models, is built with silk, cashmere, Shetland wool, and hand-tufted cotton. To lie upon it is to feel the precision of English engineering wrapped in the warmth of pastoral romance.
Vispring's factory in Devon remains a temple of craftsmanship. Their artisans measure by hand, stitch by hand, and finish by hand. If Savoir is theatre, Vispring is the orchestra pit: discreet, masterful, perfectly tuned.
Treca Paris: Where Sleep Meets Sartorial Elegance
The French, naturally, have a way of turning even rest into an art form. Treca Paris has been handcrafting beds for over eighty years, producing mattresses with the same care a couturier applies to a bespoke suit.
The Treca Paris Impérial is an ode to quiet sophistication. Filled with natural materials such as horsehair and cashmere, it adapts to the sleeper's every contour with the grace of a well-trained butler. The brand even offers made-to-measure designs to suit one's specific spine and aesthetic preferences.
Sleeping on a Treca bed is not so much an experience as an event, an elegant nightly ritual that feels faintly scandalous in its comfort.
Kluft: The Californian Contender
For those who prefer their luxury with a Californian tan, Kluft offers a distinctly American interpretation of opulence. The brand's mattresses are hand-sewn in Los Angeles and use an improbable number of layers, often more than forty.
The result is a bed that feels both cloud-like and supportive, offering that elusive balance between plushness and posture. The brand's philosophy is simple: one should never have to choose between indulgence and integrity.
Kluft mattresses can cost upward of thirty thousand pounds, but owners swear by them. They are, as one customer once said, "like sleeping on an apology from the universe."
Aireloom: Hollywood's Secret to Beauty Sleep
Aireloom, another Californian house, was founded in the 1940s and quickly became the bed of choice for Golden Age film stars. There's something undeniably glamorous about that.
Each bed is still made by hand, using a process called "the Aireloom lift," a unique design that gives the sleeper the sensation of weightlessness. It's this sensation (part suspension, part sorcery) that makes Aireloom so addictive.
The company has never cared much for advertising. Their best marketing comes from their clients, many of whom have never quite recovered from their first night.
Royal Pedic: The Bed of Presidents
If political lineage impresses you, Royal Pedic might be your match. Established in 1946, the company has served the likes of John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, and countless dignitaries who apparently agreed that foreign policy was best conducted after a decent night's sleep.
Each mattress is made with organic cotton, natural latex, and fine Belgian damask. The craftsmanship is so precise that every mattress is inspected by hand, then re-checked by someone who has been inspecting mattresses longer than you've been alive.
To sleep on a Royal Pedic bed is to understand diplomacy from the inside out. It's also an effective strategy for avoiding compromise, particularly of the lumbar variety.
Rested: The Minimalist's Approach to Maximal Comfort
While some brands rely on grandeur, Rested, a British newcomer, has chosen the opposite route. They work quietly, focusing on clean design, ergonomic science, and the subtle elegance of materials that don't shout.
Each bed is designed to look like it belongs in a gallery. The company works closely with European manufacturers to create a blend of contemporary form and artisan construction.
If Savoir represents old-world mastery, Rested represents the modern aesthete, someone who finds luxury not in excess, but in restraint.
Hypnos: The Royal Warrant Holder
The name says it all. Hypnos, named after the Greek god of sleep, has been making mattresses in the United Kingdom for over a century. They hold a Royal Warrant, which means the late Queen quite literally signed off on their comfort.
Their mattresses use British wool, natural latex, and hand-stitched sides. They are famous for balance, never too soft, never too firm, always correct. Hypnos beds are what you buy when you want luxury without fanfare. They are quietly regal, much like the clientele who favour them.
Somnus: The Yorkshire Perfectionists
Somnus, founded in 1840, is the Yorkshire answer to sleep refinement. Each bed is made entirely in-house, from the weaving of the fabric to the assembly of the springs. They even maintain their own flock of sheep to ensure the purity of their wool.
There is something profoundly English about that level of commitment. Somnus beds are layered with Egyptian cotton, mohair, and hemp, all arranged with military precision. They are the antithesis of mass production.
To sleep on one is to rediscover the lost art of repose.
A Gentle Conclusion for the Weary Aristocrat
The true luxury bed is not a commodity but a companion. It should age with you, cradle you, and greet each morning as if it were the start of something splendid.
A fine bed is not merely a purchase. It is a philosophy, one that says, "My sleep is sacred, my rest is earned, and my comfort shall be absolute."
Savoir may lead the field, but each of these creations embodies a facet of excellence: the Swedish obsession with detail, the French romance with form, the American devotion to comfort, and the British mastery of craft.
Choose one, and you will never again think of sleep as surrender. You will think of it as succession.
Because in the final analysis, true luxury is not about how you live. It is about how you rest.


