Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Here we are again :{))
"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in message ... Skip & Group: (bedding covers discussion): It does look like a mini awning stripe material. But you have to understand how we use it. Our sleeping cushions are rarely exposed to the naked eye just like your bed at home. They are made up with a fitted mattress pad and fitted sheets and topped off with a top sheet (in summer) or a duvet containing a down comforter (in cool weather). It is synthetic so it does not mildew and is pretty soft. It costs less than a third per yard than Sunbrella and is 63" wide so goes farther as well. Interesting. My guy claims his is similar in price (and the roll he's got looks like 63, but I didn't measure it). Point taken on visibility. There's gotta be some same-material/different-pattern alternative, though! Any suggestions? As to us, we're planning on making custom sheets from flat stock (can't find any roll stock of 400TPI), and sleeping with a loose lightweight cover or if it proves too cool, a down comforter/duvet-covered over a loose sheet. The Vee will be easier, as there's a place to tuck to, but our cabin's configuration won't work for that. We thought a bit about a bed-in-a-bag solution, but figured that the less barrier to our body heat the better for a visco-elastic bed. Just checked with the Goddess Of Canvas and I was mistaken. The memory foam matress we did was covered with a Jersey Knit material It was a synthetic (acrylic she thinks) So it does not mildew. Do you have a source? Or, are you saying the mattress arrived with the manufacturer's cover, and you put something else over it? As to Gore-Tex, it's not cushions, it's mattresses. What attracted us was the thought that a splash (sorta inevitable from time to time in a sea state) would not go through, but that body moisture and other natural humidity would pass readily, keeping the foam fresh. We have no direct expreience with this approach. The G-Of-C doesn't think you would be happy with the result though. Turns out to be a moot point (see below)... For our interior seating, we'd expect to do standard upholstery material, whether Sunbrella interior or other. The attractiveness to SB is the stain and water resistance (see above). The upolstery material we use is stain and water resistant and available in hundreds of styles. We've had ours for 5 years and have no stains yet. Only blemish is when a guest broke a bottle of clear fingernail polish and it spilled on one of the cushions. Hm. I'd thought that you were the source who twigged me to memory-file the Sunbrella interior stuff. What do you use? moisture (well, liquid) barrier. In any event, GT sells only to manufacturers, so we're unlikely to make our covers from that, any way. That was a comment from the G-Of-C. She was wondering where you would get some. We are manufacturers but have never had any use for it. Not sure if they would sell in the small quantities we might use anyway. We use GoreTex thread on a regular basis but that's a different situation. Indeed. We gave up on finding any - and also on the concept, as 1) the manufacturer of the "real thing" quit using it (perhaps due to expense, but at least nominally because of performance issues) and 2) the stuff is so ungodly expensive that 1) above clinched it. L8R Skip and Lydia -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig http://tinyurl.com/384p2 "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |