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4 Poster Bedroom Ideas

4 Poster Bedroom Ideas

9 Ways to Dress a Four-Poster Bed

Complete the fairy-tale look or go as modern as you like with canopies, swags, drapes — or nothing at all

Affectionately known as the king of beds and the bed of kings, the four-poster is often associated with romance and fairy tales. Its kingly reference is quite accurate, as the four-poster bed was originally created for nobility around the 13th century. Its shape and materials have evolved over time from massive ornately carved oak and tapestries to sumptuous velvets, shimmery silks and embroidery.

Nowadays a four-poster bed is still often coveted by many. Let's look at ways to dress one, from traditional drapery to breezy swags, and even how to have a gorgeously undressed look.

Canopy

Four-poster beds evolved from

canopy beds

, also known as tester beds, which were created for purely functional reasons: warmth and privacy. Curtains originally hung from the ceiling, but evolved as a frame was added to the bed to support an overhead canopy, which helped with heat retention. (It's also said that the canopy stopped critters from falling onto the bed from thatched ceilings.)

Canopies were originally made entirely of wood, often of heavily carved oak. Canopies were often used in conjunction with drapery panels. Later, fabric replaced the wood canopy portion for a lighter look. On some beds the outer canopy frame was kept, while on others it was dropped, but the four tall support posts remained. The sense of enclosure created by this bed style is psychologically comforting and likely why the

four-poster bed

maintains its popularity.

This elegant bed by Heintzman Sanborn Architecture~Interior Design has creamy silk at the bed's head, canopy and valance, and operable linen-poly-blend sheer side drapery by Pollack Fabrics.

Something to consider with this design is whether the fabric components can be easily removed or not. Architect Maureen Sanborn says for this bed, they concealed a wood rod between two valances (one on the interior side of the bed and one on the exterior) from which to hang the side drapery fabric. Sanborn says the rod is removable so the fabric valance and drapery can be cleaned. In contrast, some beds have to be completely taken apart to remove the fabric components.

Designer Cindy Rinfret took a slightly more traditional approach with this bed design for a Douglas VanderHorn Architects project in Connecticut. She paired an

upholstered headboard

with a layer of drapery behind it and partial panels at each side of the headboard. The fabric canopy is set within a shaped wood frame with a graceful gathered, fringed valance on three sides.

Something else to take into account with a canopy bed is the fabric type and yardage required, which contribute to the cost. Some fabrics, such as sheers and solid-colored linens, don't have a visual front or back, while a printed or woven fabric does. So any valance or drapery panels visible from both sides will require fabric on both sides if you're using a printed fabric.

In this case the gathered valance needed fabric on both sides, but the drapery at the head needed fabric only on one side, since it's against the wall. Rinfret notes this bed required about 15 yards for the blue fabric on the headboard drapery and interior valance, and 10 yards of the floral fabric for the outside of the valance, as well as 15 yards of trim.

Shop fabric on Houzz

This simple canopy is a made of a light, gauzy fabric tied to the bed frame through small grommet holes.

Valance

Designer Gina Fitzsimons used a valance installed at the ceiling along with drapery at the headboard to create the perception of a partial canopy here. The turned posts of the bed fit up into the valance at the head of the bed.

Loose Swags

Draping a piece of fabric over the bed frame was likely the easiest and least expensive way to dress this bed. This approach is casual and uses a wispy, reversible fabric, such as a sheer, gauzy cotton.

Instead of a single swag, this bed has two draped swags for balance. If you think this style might be for you, decide whether you want your side panels to puddle or pool on the floor a bit, just hit the floor, or be just slightly raised off the floor, as in this image.

Lit à la Polonaise

A lit à la Polonaise is a four-poster bed frame that's bent to create an overhead crown. The phrase is French for "Polish bed," and this style exudes a frilly, romantic air. Attaching fabric at the crown by ties, as shown here, or a pocket allows the fabric to be wrapped in swirling swaths around the supports.

Drapery at the Corners

Taking advantage of the rail supports by adding drapery panels is one of the most popular dressing options for four-poster beds. There are different possibilities for the types of drapery panels and where they're located. Here tab-top drapery panels, two on each side, are pulled toward the posts of the bed and hang freely.

Find tab top drapery on Houzz

Enchantingly flexible, the configuration can be easily transformed by tying the panels to the support posts or opening them up to create a headboard, as shown here. Make sure a fabric with enough weight is selected for the drapery panels, especially if you intend to move them. Metal grommets, used in these drapery panels, require a sewn heading and a medium-weight fabric.

Drapery at the Bed Head

Another option is to install a

drapery panel

only at the head of the bed to create a drapery headboard. Often another small panel is added to the side rails by the pillows to create a more enclosed, intimate space. Designer Andrea Schumacher says those panels are usually between one-fourth and one-third the width of the canopy panel at the head of the bed. Here lightweight pocket-top drapery panels allow the top rails to run easily through them.

Schumacher says the side panels are double faced, or double sided with fabric, but since the drapery panel at the head is against the wall, it required only the front, or face, fabric.

The fullness of the panels is another consideration. Zero fullness means the fabric is flat, with no waves. For drapery panels with 100 percent fullness, the fabric width is halved by equal ratios of forward and backward waves or pleats created in the fabric. Most drapery varies and has a fullness of 50 to 200 percent, but 100 percent is most common.

These pinch-pleat d rapery panels have a pretty, more formal look and are less full to emphasize the pleats.

Drapery at the Sides

Using drapery panels only at the sides of the bed is another alternative. This contemporary four-poster bed has rails only at the bed's side and cool mesh panels on them.

Mix It Up

Don't be afraid to mix it up! This bed combines a loose canopy draped over intermediate canopy rails and dreamy semitransparent panels tied to the bedposts.

Nothing at All

Going bare is a great option too, allowing the bed frame to shine. Despite not having any drapery or swags, the vertical element created by this bed frame still creates a quasi-enclosed space.

The two-toned paint on this bare bed frame creates the illusion that the upper white portion is hovering above the bed.

Finally, this kitty's dressed-up four-poster bed, made from an upturned table, does just fine with only some fringe and a fluffy pillow!

Young and vibrant residential design | London

4 Poster Bedroom Ideas

Source: https://www.houzz.com/magazine/9-ways-to-dress-a-four-poster-bed-stsetivw-vs~26915431

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