Essentia
Dec 16, 2009 10:36 PM
Joined: Dec 16, 2009
Points: 11
I'm new here. I've spent a few hours poking around but haven't found any information on the mattress I'm considering: the Classic 8 by a company called Essentia (www.myessentia.com). They are a Canadian company that makes what is billed as the world's only natural memory foam. Has anyone heard of them? Thanks for taking the time to answer. -Michelle
Re: Essentia
Reply #41 Jan 29, 2010 10:07 PM
Joined: Sep 6, 2008
Points: 87
Essentia .... I was sincerely looking forward to buying your mattress, and was greatly disappointed when I sat on it as it just didn't support me well. My wife loved it ... just not me. Doesn't mean it isn't a good product. If I remember, you were offering it at a GREAT price.
Re: Essentia
Reply #42 Feb 13, 2010 9:16 PM
Joined: Feb 13, 2010
Points: 1
great price?  Where?  looksa like almost $3,000 USD for Classic 8 including box spring......US dollar...where is the price great?
Re: Essentia
Reply #43 Apr 27, 2010 2:19 PM
Joined: Apr 27, 2010
Points: 1
There are lots of claims being made in the marketplace, most unsubstantiated. One of the biggest laughable claims is Essentia's claim of having a natural memory foam.

They make a latex mattress. Latex is rubber. There is no such thing as natural memory foam. It is just a marketing term. There is memory foam, which is a process of mixing chemicals

and petroleum based oils. The chemicals react and rise up into a foam. Then there is latex rubber, taken from a rubber tree. There are a minimum of chemicals used in the making of

latex. Essentia is an overpriced marketing machine in Canada where US laws on truth in advertising do not apply to them. Stick to companies based here in the US.

Re: Essentia
Reply #44 Apr 27, 2010 8:04 PM
Joined: Dec 17, 2009
Points: 850
lol, your laws in the US are no more protective of false advertising and/or exxagerated claims.  what Essentia is selling is a slow response latex foam that mimicks the feeling of normal memory foams.  kind of what Latex International (US company) called NuForm.  I agree that their product shouldn't be advertised as natural, heck I even see they are now calling it 'organic' which is a joke....but still....there are Essentia stores in the US using this language...it would be nice if there was a more strict standard on what you can legally call natural or organic.  3rd party certification is still the biggie there...
Re: Essentia
Reply #45 Apr 27, 2010 10:49 PM
Joined: Aug 17, 2009
Points: 542
budgy wrote:

lol, your laws in the US are no more protective of false advertising and/or exxagerated claims.  what Essentia is selling is a slow response latex foam that mimicks the feeling of normal memory foams.  kind of what Latex International (US company) called NuForm.  I agree that their product shouldn't be advertised as natural, heck I even see they are now calling it 'organic' which is a joke....but still....there are Essentia stores in the US using this language...it would be nice if there was a more strict standard on what you can legally call natural or organic.  3rd party certification is still the biggie there...


Budgy: Let me first of all thank you for being an "honest broker." What I mean by that is, your are about the only person actually in the business who has come here and given honest answers without trying to peddle something. There may have been others in the past, who have ceased to respond here and I'm not aware of them. But your efforts have been recognized and appreciated by many.

I could not agree more that what is desperately needed is for the Congress of the United States to write a very clear law stating that all manufacturers of latex must label there product in accordance with a strict set of disclosures that really tell the buying public everything about there product, in very plain language. So that there could be no more of this, "you guessum" approach to selling mattresses.

Mattresses are just too big of a purchase. Many people, many many people, have a very difficult time scraping together $2000, let alone $3000 or more. And given the fact that 4 huge banks in the US control, I believe my figures are correct, two thirds of all credit cards issued therefore having almost no competition, and charging between 25 and 30% interest is absolutely scandalous. So needless to say a mattress can be a very large purchase indeed.

So thank you again for your valuable assistance.

Don

This message was modified Apr 27, 2010 by eagle2
Re: Essentia
Reply #46 Oct 6, 2010 5:01 AM
Joined: Oct 3, 2010
Points: 809
I wanted to resurrect this thread because I was curious if anyone (other than the one poster in this thread) had tried this mattress.

I am still very skeptical that they manufacture their own "latex memory foam" as in all my research I haven't seen them mentioned as a manufacturer.

Nuform from Latex International was mentioned in this thread but it didn't seem like anyone connected it with Essentia. I would guess that Essentia is using Nuform and calling it their own. Either that or they may be some kind of hidden subsidiary of LI ... but I doubt that.

In any case, in spite of the fact that their mattresses are horrendously expensive, I am thinking that it would feel like nuform and there are some mattresses out there that are using Nuform that are significantly less.

So has anyone actually experienced either an Essentia mattress or a mattress with a few inches of Nuform on the top and if so how did it compare with both latex and with decent memory foam?

Thanks

Phoenix

Re: Essentia
Reply #47 Feb 20, 2011 10:35 PM
Joined: Jan 27, 2011
Points: 17
Hi-- I bought an essentia classic 8 on Feb 1. I tried this mattress at their store in Toronto and I really liked it. So far is taking forever to arrive, they told me to expect it delivered at the end of this week.

I’ll come back to this forum for updates once I get to sleep on it :)

Re: Essentia
Reply #48 Feb 27, 2011 2:25 PM
Joined: Jan 27, 2011
Points: 17
I got the mattress 5 days ago (a week later than promised), opened it up and put it together. It smells like rubber which it doesn't bother me. Unfortunatelly this bed is VERY hot for me. Furthermore, I'm waking up every morning with a backache. Essentia has another bed with more support (ca$3763+tax) but I can not afford it :( and still it would be too hot to sleep on.

 

The positive thing is that I can return it and I'll have to pay only a 2% recycling fee, arround $200. 

BUT I'm still dissapointed..

 

AnnaLucia wrote:

Hi-- I bought an essentia classic 8 on Feb 1. I tried this mattress at their store in Toronto and I really liked it. So far is taking forever to arrive, they told me to expect it delivered at the end of this week.

 

I’ll come back to this forum for updates once I get to sleep on it :)



This message was modified Feb 27, 2011 by AnnaLucia
Re: Essentia
Reply #49 Sep 2, 2012 7:45 PM
Joined: Feb 24, 2012
Points: 42
I recently went to the Essentia store in Santa Monica because i was curious if their memory foam would sleep hot.  I like some Tempurpedic beds but did not like the heat retention. The Essentia memory foam does not really strike me as a true memory foam. It springs back right away and does not leave an impression that lasts any length of time. It does succeed in giving a little less pushback than my Flobeds natural Talalay latex. I think somebody going to Essential and expecting a Tempurpedic experience will be disappointed. I found it difficult to descern any difference between the Essentia "memory foam" and a normal latex mattress.

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