Okay so this is embarrassing but I literally spent three weeks researching beds. THREE WEEKS. My girlfriend thinks I've lost it, but hear me out.
It started when my old bed frame broke. Like, properly broke - I was getting up one morning and the whole side just... collapsed. Made this horrible splintering sound that woke up the neighbors. My dog freaked out and refused to sleep in there for like a week - apparently beds collapsing is traumatic for everyone involved. Turns out when you buy furniture from that place that rhymes with "shmikea" and assemble it wrong (twice), this is what happens.
Anyway, that's how I ended up on HORNE's website at 2am, going down the deepest rabbit hole of my life.
First off, apparently we spend like 8-9 hours a day in bed. I know, I know, everyone says this. But when your bed literally falls apart underneath you, it hits different.
HORNE has this whole collection of modern beds and honestly? At first I thought they were just overpriced hipster furniture. I was originally looking at queen beds since that's what everyone says you should get, but then I started wondering if I actually needed a king bed frame - my bedroom's pretty big and my girlfriend's always complaining about space. But then I started reading about the brands they carry and... okay I was wrong.
Kalon Studios - These guys make furniture that looks like it belongs in a meditation app commercial. Everything's sustainable (they track their wood from forest to factory, which is kind of insane). My cousin got one of their beds and claims she's been sleeping better. Could be placebo effect, could be the $2000 bed. Who knows.
Stephen Kenn - Okay this brand is wild. The founder used to work in fashion, then switched to furniture. Their beds look like something you'd find in a converted warehouse in Brooklyn. Industrial but not in a "I live in a metal shop" way.
Gus Modern - Canadian company. I have a thing for Canadian design - it's like Scandinavian but with more personality. They're big on sustainability too, which my environmentally conscious sister appreciates (she sent me like 47 links about sustainable furniture after I told her I was bed shopping).
Ferm Living - Danish brand, because apparently Denmark has figured out how to make everything beautiful and functional. Their beds look simple but the details are incredible. Like, they think about stuff you wouldn't even notice until you're living with it.
Plot twist - I wasn't planning to care about this. But when you're dropping serious money on furniture, you start asking questions. Like, am I really going to keep this queen bed for 10+ years? Because that's what it'll take to justify the cost. Like, where does this wood come from? How is it made? Will this thing be in a landfill in five years?
Turns out brands like Kalon and Gus Modern aren't just slapping "eco-friendly" labels on their stuff. They actually show you their supply chain, their factories, everything. It's like... transparency in furniture? Who knew.
Kalon Studios Simple Bed - Bought this one. Yeah, the name is basic but the bed isn't. It's like if minimalism grew up and got a job. Still looks fresh three months later.
Stephen Kenn Inheritance Bed - Almost got this instead. The name alone sold me - they literally design it to be passed down. My parents still have furniture from the 70s, so this resonated.
Ferm Living Sill Junior Bed - Weird that it's called "junior" when it's just a normal single bed. Marketing is weird. But it's gorgeous and would work great in my home office/guest room. Though honestly, I was also looking at some of their best bed settees for that room - more flexible when people visit, you know?
Gus Modern Carmichael Bed - This was my safe choice. Classic modern design, good reviews, reasonable price. Sometimes safe is smart.
Here's what nobody tells you about buying a nice bed - suddenly your old nightstands look terrible. The whole bedroom furniture and decor shopping thing becomes this endless spiral - suddenly you're researching everything from lamps to rugs. And your dresser. And basically everything else in your room.
HORNE has matching pieces from all these brands, which saves you from the "my bedroom looks like a furniture showroom exploded" problem I had before.
Look, their stuff isn't cheap. But it's not crazy expensive either, especially when you compare it to other high-end furniture stores. Plus they have actual customer service that responds to emails in less than three days (shocking, I know).
The best part? Everything I've bought from them has exceeded expectations. My bed came exactly when they said it would, assembly was straightforward (even for someone who destroyed an Ikea bed frame), and no weird chemical smell like some furniture has.
I probably could have bought a perfectly fine bed for half the price. But after sleeping on a Kalon bed for three months, I get it. Good design isn't just about looks - it's about how something makes you feel every day.
Also, my girlfriend stopped complaining about my old mattress sliding around, so relationship win there.
If you're considering HORNE, do it. Just maybe don't tell them I spent three weeks researching. That's between us.
P.S. - Still not sure if I want to admit how much I spent on matching nightstands. Baby steps.