Several months ago, we purchased a natural latex crib mattress for our newborn. It was pricey, but I couldn’t buy anything less, knowing what I know. Recently, we’ve decided to move my 5-year old into a full bed. He got all new furniture and of course, now we were in need of a new mattress. But a full costs oh so much more than a crib.
Again though, I couldn’t put my child on a traditional mattress, full of petrochemicals and flame retardants, off-gassing formaldehyde all around him for 10+ hours a day. So we did what we did before–we bought cheaper furniture and splurged on the mattress. The full 6″ natural talalay latex mattress made by a local company without any chemicals cost $1400. The organic wool mattress protector was $150. My son already has a nice natural latex pillow. We’re topping the bed with an organic cotton blanket, which will work for now until we need something warmer. The best thing about splurging on a natural latex mattress is that it will last 20 years–and so does the warranty. That means something to me when I have 3 kids that will likely use this mattress and when I’m already noticing that my personal 4 year old innerspring mattress is sagging.
And here comes the irony. After spending all this time and money finding the cleanest mattress and bedding possibly, the furniture arrives. While it’s solid wood (no particle board, glued together with chemicals that off-gas), the varnish on the wood is clearly not low-VOC. In fact, it stinks! I thought about returning it and buying something else. But until you actually get wood furniture in your home, how would you know if the varnish used contains lots of VOCs? And we can’t afford really expensive furniture. I thought about buying used, but I really wanted a matching set, which is hard to find used. What would you do?
Posted by Renee Pendergrass on November 10, 2010 at 7:16 am
You can always find pieces @ consigment shops and repaint them with low VOCs paints to match. Just a thought!