foambymail latex - who owns it?
Sep 30, 2007 2:44 PM
Joined: Sep 28, 2007
Points: 28
I am hoping to order a latex mattress in the near future and am strongly leaning towards foambymail as their prices fit my budget best.  I know about the ongoing debate over where foambymail gets their latex from, but I'm willing to accept that. 

Any feedback from users who have ordered a latex mattress or topper from foambymail would be much appreciated.
This message was modified Sep 30, 2007 by jiffy524
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #74 Dec 4, 2007 11:18 AM
Joined: Sep 3, 2007
Points: 167
Eric, that's why we normally recommend half (or more) of that PU base to be 36ILD HQ foam. See my The perfect latex/PU foam thread. How did your 20 compare to your 32? My 1" 20 is very soft.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #75 Dec 4, 2007 12:26 PM
Joined: Nov 25, 2007
Points: 53
steve2u wrote:
Can the 3" 32 ILD support you without bottoming out on the LUX?


I can't say for sure, but I think so.  I would guess I am depressing the mattress maybe an inch and a half at the max.  My pressure points seem gone, but it still feels very firm, too firm of a change.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #76 Dec 4, 2007 12:37 PM
Joined: Nov 25, 2007
Points: 53
donw wrote:
Eric, that's why we normally recommend half (or more) of that PU base to be 36ILD HQ foam. See my The perfect latex/PU foam thread. How did your 20 compare to your 32? My 1" 20 is very soft.


Mine too, but the 32 is definately firmer. I read your thread but I was concerned about not having enough support.  I have ordered another 2" of 32ILD to see if that helps, but I may have to rethink the core.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #77 Dec 5, 2007 9:15 AM
Joined: Nov 25, 2007
Points: 53
Update: I must be getting used to it, slept good last night.  It was the first morning in years I felt like I could have laid in bed all morning.

Years will need to pass before I can say the FBM latex performs like latex from more expensive sources, but so far I am pleased.

This message was modified Dec 5, 2007 by ericgl
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #78 Dec 6, 2007 6:54 AM
Joined: Oct 28, 2007
Points: 69
ericgl wrote:
Update: I must be getting used to it, slept good last night.  It was the first morning in years I felt like I could have laid in bed all morning.

Years will need to pass before I can say the FBM latex performs like latex from more expensive sources, but so far I am pleased.

I still haven't ordered my 32 ILD layer yet...I've been waiting for ericgl's review on firmness. I was worried that it might be too soft for me, but it's sounding like it's fairly firm and supportive. 3" of this 32 ILD latex may be the perfect combination with my 3" HD36 and 4" LUX if I go with foamorder's Diamond Quilted Case with the 2" quilted top.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #79 Dec 6, 2007 7:06 PM
Foam Nerd
Location: USA
Joined: Aug 30, 2007
Points: 605
steve2u wrote:
I still haven't ordered my 32 ILD layer yet...I've been waiting for ericgl's review on firmness. I was worried that it might be too soft for me, but it's sounding like it's fairly firm and supportive. 3" of this 32 ILD latex may be the perfect combination with my 3" HD36 and 4" LUX if I go with foamorder's Diamond Quilted Case with the 2" quilted top.

2" top? I doubt it. It may be constructed of 2" of uncompressed material, but once quilted into the ticking it will be no more than an inch.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #80 Dec 7, 2007 7:02 AM
Joined: Oct 28, 2007
Points: 69
haysdb wrote:
2" top? I doubt it. It may be constructed of 2" of uncompressed material, but once quilted into the ticking it will be no more than an inch.
They state that the case adds 2" to the foam thickness - it's probably not the same as having 2" of foam being that it's quilted in, but my previous Sealy Fenway had about 2" of quilting when it was new and still does along the top edges of the mattress. I think I'm going to order the 32 ILD latex from FBM first and keep and eye on the clearance section at foamorder for a 12" King case. That will give me 2" to soften it up more or add more LUX (or something else that's cheaper) to the bottom to add height.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #81 Dec 8, 2007 9:09 AM
Joined: Oct 28, 2007
Points: 69
I slept on my 4" of LUX and 3" of HD36 last night and woke up with a lot less back pain than I did with the 3" memory foam on top of it. I think this combination would be too hard in the long run and make my arms go numb if I did roll on my side, but it felt good sleeping all night on my back. Can someone give me a comparison of the FBM 32 ILD latex and their HD36 PU. I'm starting to worry that 3" of 32 ILD latex on my HD36 would soften the mattress up too much, but I have read some feel the FBM latex is a little firmer than LI's latex and that latex has a softer feel than PU foam of the same ILD. After reading other threads on all latex mattresses (Flo, SleepEZ, etc.), I got the impression that many people liked having a 2.8" layer of 36 ILD for their top support layer when they prefer a firm mattress.
Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #82 Dec 8, 2007 5:01 PM
Joined: Nov 25, 2007
Points: 53
My impression having slept on latex for the last few nights is the added springiness (resiliency?) of Talalay give more support with less firmness than PU foam.  Memory foam, at least mine, has negitive resiliency (my term) and once my heat and body weight deformed it, it was hard without support. 

Perhaps after a few weeks I'll determine it is to soft, but right now it is so much better.

You could try 2" of 32ILD and add a third if you feel it would help without much penality.

Re: foambymail latex - who owns it?
Reply #83 Dec 9, 2007 12:52 PM
Foam Nerd
Location: USA
Joined: Aug 30, 2007
Points: 605
ericgl wrote:
My impression having slept on latex for the last few nights is the added springiness (resiliency?) of Talalay give more support with less firmness than PU foam.

I think that's a good way of describing the feel of latex.

Latex and memory foam are on opposite ends of the spectrum. Latex is highly resilient. Memory foam doesn't literally have negative resilience, but it's about as close to zero as any material can be and still be a solid.

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