Domera
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Solid Wood Selection: The bed frame is entirely crafted from dark solid wood (judging by the texture and grain, it is likely high-quality hardwood such as walnut). The natural wood grain is clear and layered, with dark patterns resembling mountain ranges interspersed in the light brown wood texture. Every inch of the (muscle texture) carries the growth memory of the forest. After dark coating, the grain is further enhanced, presenting a steady and (solid) yet warm texture. When touched, one can feel the natural delicacy and solid density of the wood.
Surface Craftsmanship: The coating process is exquisite, with a uniform and transparent finish that resembles an "amber film" covering the wood. It not only protects the wood from moisture and scratches but also preserves the breathability of the solid wood to the greatest extent. Up close, one can smell the faint, rustic aroma of wood wax oil (or similar natural coating materials), rather than the pungent smell of chemical paint.
Headboard and Footboard Design: Both the headboard and footboard feature elegant arcs, abandoning rigid straight lines to make the entire bed's lines flow like water. The headboard curves slightly outward, forming a natural "embracing feeling," as if silently welcoming the sleeper; the footboard's arc is relatively gentle, echoing the headboard without being overly ostentatious. The edges of the curved panels are extremely delicate, with smooth rounded corners that not only avoid collision hazards but also soften the visual lines.
Column Decoration: The headboard is flanked by turned wood columns on both sides. The columns are finely lathed to present regular concave-convex textures (similar to the "bamboo joint" or "spiral pattern" design in classical furniture), extending from the top of the bed to the bottom. Like the "guardians" of the bed, they strengthen the vertical line sense and inject detailed ingenuity into the classic shape, serving as a symbolic element that distinguishes modern minimalist beds from retro solid wood beds.
Bed Leg Structure: The bed legs are slender solid wood cylindrical legs, lightweight (seemingly lightweight) but hiding mechanical wisdom. The bottom of the legs is slightly "flared outward" (similar to the "shou fen" structure in classical furniture), which not only enhances visual stability (avoiding a top-heavy appearance) but also conforms to ergonomics, dispersing the bed's load. The surface of the legs continues the overall coating and grain, integrating seamlessly with the bed frame. A closer look reveals traces of mortise and tenon joints where the legs meet the frame (although covered by the coating, the craft logic is clear), highlighting the structural aesthetics of traditional solid wood furniture.
Splicing Craftsmanship: All components of the bed (such as the curved panels of the headboard, frame, and columns) are spliced seamlessly, with no obvious gaps or adhesive marks visible. The curved panels are spliced from multiple pieces of solid wood (since large solid wood materials are difficult to naturally bend into such a smooth arc, steam bending or manual polishing processes are required after splicing). The texture transition at the splicing points is natural, as if the curves grew from the wood itself rather than the (rigid feeling) of artificial splicing, reflecting superb wood splicing and shaping craftsmanship.
Edge Treatment: In addition to the rounded corners of the curved panels, all exposed edges of the bed body (including the top of the bed frame and the edges of the side panels) are chamfered or rounded, with a warm touch and no burrs. This not only improves safety (avoiding collisions and scratches) but also makes the bed appear more "soft" visually, highly consistent with the "elegant and restrained" temperament pursued by classical styles.
Solid Wood Selection: The bed frame is entirely crafted from dark solid wood (judging by the texture and grain, it is likely high-quality hardwood such as walnut). The natural wood grain is clear and layered, with dark patterns resembling mountain ranges interspersed in the light brown wood texture. Every inch of the (muscle texture) carries the growth memory of the forest. After dark coating, the grain is further enhanced, presenting a steady and (solid) yet warm texture. When touched, one can feel the natural delicacy and solid density of the wood.
Surface Craftsmanship: The coating process is exquisite, with a uniform and transparent finish that resembles an "amber film" covering the wood. It not only protects the wood from moisture and scratches but also preserves the breathability of the solid wood to the greatest extent. Up close, one can smell the faint, rustic aroma of wood wax oil (or similar natural coating materials), rather than the pungent smell of chemical paint.
Headboard and Footboard Design: Both the headboard and footboard feature elegant arcs, abandoning rigid straight lines to make the entire bed's lines flow like water. The headboard curves slightly outward, forming a natural "embracing feeling," as if silently welcoming the sleeper; the footboard's arc is relatively gentle, echoing the headboard without being overly ostentatious. The edges of the curved panels are extremely delicate, with smooth rounded corners that not only avoid collision hazards but also soften the visual lines.
Column Decoration: The headboard is flanked by turned wood columns on both sides. The columns are finely lathed to present regular concave-convex textures (similar to the "bamboo joint" or "spiral pattern" design in classical furniture), extending from the top of the bed to the bottom. Like the "guardians" of the bed, they strengthen the vertical line sense and inject detailed ingenuity into the classic shape, serving as a symbolic element that distinguishes modern minimalist beds from retro solid wood beds.
Bed Leg Structure: The bed legs are slender solid wood cylindrical legs, lightweight (seemingly lightweight) but hiding mechanical wisdom. The bottom of the legs is slightly "flared outward" (similar to the "shou fen" structure in classical furniture), which not only enhances visual stability (avoiding a top-heavy appearance) but also conforms to ergonomics, dispersing the bed's load. The surface of the legs continues the overall coating and grain, integrating seamlessly with the bed frame. A closer look reveals traces of mortise and tenon joints where the legs meet the frame (although covered by the coating, the craft logic is clear), highlighting the structural aesthetics of traditional solid wood furniture.
Splicing Craftsmanship: All components of the bed (such as the curved panels of the headboard, frame, and columns) are spliced seamlessly, with no obvious gaps or adhesive marks visible. The curved panels are spliced from multiple pieces of solid wood (since large solid wood materials are difficult to naturally bend into such a smooth arc, steam bending or manual polishing processes are required after splicing). The texture transition at the splicing points is natural, as if the curves grew from the wood itself rather than the (rigid feeling) of artificial splicing, reflecting superb wood splicing and shaping craftsmanship.
Edge Treatment: In addition to the rounded corners of the curved panels, all exposed edges of the bed body (including the top of the bed frame and the edges of the side panels) are chamfered or rounded, with a warm touch and no burrs. This not only improves safety (avoiding collisions and scratches) but also makes the bed appear more "soft" visually, highly consistent with the "elegant and restrained" temperament pursued by classical styles.
60":
60 inches in length, 78 inches in width and 60 inches in height
Both color and size can be customized
70":
70inches in length, 78 inches in width and 60 inches in height
60":
60 inches in length, 78 inches in width and 60 inches in height
Both color and size can be customized
70":
70inches in length, 78 inches in width and 60 inches in height
Selected walnut logs over 30cm in diameter, using heartwood (avoiding sapwood's cracking tendency). After 12-18 months of natural air-drying plus 72-hour constant-temperature kiln drying, moisture content is controlled at 8%-12% to ensure wood stability and prevent later deformation.
Strict grain screening: Only straight-grained, knot-free wood is used. Curved headboard panels require boards with consistent grain orientation to ensure continuous patterns after splicing, like "natural arcs."
The smooth arc of the headboard uses steam bending: Solid wood planks (2-3cm thick) are cut, steamed in a chamber (80-100℃, ≥90% humidity) for 4-6 hours. After fibers soften, they’re quickly fixed in a custom curved mold and cooled for 72 hours, ensuring precise arc and even internal stress to avoid cracking.
Hand-assisted polishing: The shaped arc undergoes 5-stage sanding (80-2000 grit) to eliminate minor wrinkles from steam bending, achieving a velvety-smooth touch.
Bed legs connect to the frame via a round tenon + hidden dovetail joint composite structure: The leg top has a 2cm-diameter round tenon inserted into the frame’s mortise, with a dovetail groove on the side fixed by a wedge, ensuring vertical load-bearing over 500kg without loosening. No exposed hardware preserves the solid wood integrity.
Headboard columns use long-short tenons: The column’s bottom tenon has two segments (10cm deep long tenon + positioning short tenon), bonded with fish glue (traditional wood glue). The joint resists pulling and hides the glue line within the grain.
The bed base features a slatted base + solid wood crossbeam design: 12 solid wood slats (2.5cm wide, 8cm spacing for ergonomic pressure distribution) are supported by 3 crossbeams (5cm×8cm), fixed to the frame with metal connectors in a "well" shape, bearing up to 800kg without sagging.
Base treatment: Wood is sanded 6 times (coarse to fine), then coated with natural wood wax oil primer to penetrate pores and enhance water resistance.
Coloring combines rubbing + spraying: A cotton cloth dips into diluted walnut pigment and wipes along the grain for natural shading, followed by 2-3 layers of transparent wood wax oil topcoat (24h intervals). After drying, 0000-grade steel wool polishes it to an "amber film" transparency.
Special technique for turned columns: Use a fine brush to dab 1-2 shades deeper pigment into the grooves, enhancing the 3D effect of the texture, mimicking classic furniture "antiquing" with uniform softness.
All exposed edges (frame top, drawer edges) undergo R2mm rounded corner treatment: First rough-grinded by a corner machine, then finely polished with sponge sandpaper for rounded edges, safe for children.
Spliced seams of curved panels are grain-aligned sanded: Polished along the grain to make the seam thickness difference ≤0.1mm, invisible to the eye and smooth to the touch.
The "bamboo joint" texture on headboard columns is made by CNC lathe + hand finishing: Set each joint’s height (3cm) and groove depth (0.5cm) on the lathe, then a craftsman carves the groove edges by hand to remove tool marks, ensuring natural transitions with ≤0.3mm circular error for perfect symmetry.
The footboard center may feature solid wood parquetry: Small walnut pieces (dark heartwood and light sapwood) are spliced into geometric patterns (diamonds, meander lines). Each piece is precise to 1mm, joined by mortise-groove, then sanded flush, creating a color contrast that looks like natural grain.
Laser-assisted splicing: When joining curved panels, a laser aligns the splicing angle to keep grain deviation ≤5°, ensuring continuous patterns.
Nondestructive testing: After mortise-tenon assembly, an ultrasonic scanner checks for even adhesive penetration, guaranteeing a structure lasting over 50 years.
Selected walnut logs over 30cm in diameter, using heartwood (avoiding sapwood's cracking tendency). After 12-18 months of natural air-drying plus 72-hour constant-temperature kiln drying, moisture content is controlled at 8%-12% to ensure wood stability and prevent later deformation.
Strict grain screening: Only straight-grained, knot-free wood is used. Curved headboard panels require boards with consistent grain orientation to ensure continuous patterns after splicing, like "natural arcs."
The smooth arc of the headboard uses steam bending: Solid wood planks (2-3cm thick) are cut, steamed in a chamber (80-100℃, ≥90% humidity) for 4-6 hours. After fibers soften, they’re quickly fixed in a custom curved mold and cooled for 72 hours, ensuring precise arc and even internal stress to avoid cracking.
Hand-assisted polishing: The shaped arc undergoes 5-stage sanding (80-2000 grit) to eliminate minor wrinkles from steam bending, achieving a velvety-smooth touch.
Bed legs connect to the frame via a round tenon + hidden dovetail joint composite structure: The leg top has a 2cm-diameter round tenon inserted into the frame’s mortise, with a dovetail groove on the side fixed by a wedge, ensuring vertical load-bearing over 500kg without loosening. No exposed hardware preserves the solid wood integrity.
Headboard columns use long-short tenons: The column’s bottom tenon has two segments (10cm deep long tenon + positioning short tenon), bonded with fish glue (traditional wood glue). The joint resists pulling and hides the glue line within the grain.
The bed base features a slatted base + solid wood crossbeam design: 12 solid wood slats (2.5cm wide, 8cm spacing for ergonomic pressure distribution) are supported by 3 crossbeams (5cm×8cm), fixed to the frame with metal connectors in a "well" shape, bearing up to 800kg without sagging.
Base treatment: Wood is sanded 6 times (coarse to fine), then coated with natural wood wax oil primer to penetrate pores and enhance water resistance.
Coloring combines rubbing + spraying: A cotton cloth dips into diluted walnut pigment and wipes along the grain for natural shading, followed by 2-3 layers of transparent wood wax oil topcoat (24h intervals). After drying, 0000-grade steel wool polishes it to an "amber film" transparency.
Special technique for turned columns: Use a fine brush to dab 1-2 shades deeper pigment into the grooves, enhancing the 3D effect of the texture, mimicking classic furniture "antiquing" with uniform softness.
All exposed edges (frame top, drawer edges) undergo R2mm rounded corner treatment: First rough-grinded by a corner machine, then finely polished with sponge sandpaper for rounded edges, safe for children.
Spliced seams of curved panels are grain-aligned sanded: Polished along the grain to make the seam thickness difference ≤0.1mm, invisible to the eye and smooth to the touch.
The "bamboo joint" texture on headboard columns is made by CNC lathe + hand finishing: Set each joint’s height (3cm) and groove depth (0.5cm) on the lathe, then a craftsman carves the groove edges by hand to remove tool marks, ensuring natural transitions with ≤0.3mm circular error for perfect symmetry.
The footboard center may feature solid wood parquetry: Small walnut pieces (dark heartwood and light sapwood) are spliced into geometric patterns (diamonds, meander lines). Each piece is precise to 1mm, joined by mortise-groove, then sanded flush, creating a color contrast that looks like natural grain.
Laser-assisted splicing: When joining curved panels, a laser aligns the splicing angle to keep grain deviation ≤5°, ensuring continuous patterns.
Nondestructive testing: After mortise-tenon assembly, an ultrasonic scanner checks for even adhesive penetration, guaranteeing a structure lasting over 50 years.