I am very interested in a Heywood Wakefield bedroom set on Craigslist. However, it comes with a full size headboard and footboard, and the owner will not sell the set without the bed. The problem is, I have a queen mattress. Does anyone have experience with accommodating a one-size larger mattress onto a smaller bed frame? Thanks so much!




http://www.bedframeparts.com/modiplates.htm
Your main difference is 6 inches in width, but 8 inches in length. You may not be able to use the rails, but you should be able to use modification plates to use the headboard and the footboard with your bed. It's fairly unnoticeable, depending on what you do with your bedding and pillows to cause a small illusion at the 3 inches on either side. I don't know a lot about these antique manufacturers and whether or not it might actually have modi plates on it. Most modern manufacturers will make the bed with the modi plates, but still the rails won't be long enough. You can use a standard frame until you figure out how to replace them, or someone else has a suggestion for that.
view K T G's profile
Cut the footboard in half, extend headboard on both sides and you have an impressive focal point in the bedroom.
view bromelia's profile
Just get a new mattress. You can get a slice of foam cut from your local supplier for a fraction of the cost of something you'd get at Sleepy's and then it's custom to your gorgeous new bed.
view medusa12120's profile
"Cut the footboard in half"? Pls don't even THINK about that. This is Heywood-Wakefield--that's the impressive focal point itself--which I'm sure you recognize.
Just try living with a full-size mattress and bed for a bit--you might find that it's not so bad after all.
view pammyfay's profile
Buy the set then sell the headboard/footboard.
: )
view modtramp's profile
Is there a guest room that you can use it in? I know it's something that you really want, but I just don't see your bed working with it, unfortunately.
view Erin Lang Norris/Yellow Canoe's profile
You could just use the headboard behind a queen mattress and standard metal frame and store the footboard and rails under the bed. I have a Heywood Wakefield bed and I thought about converting it, but I didn't want to drill/bolt the extender plates into the frame and I still didn't know what to do about the rails being too short. I ended up keeping mine in its original condition as a guest room bed.
Maybe do as modtramp suggests and buy the set and sell the bed. I'm sure someone will buy it.
view palindrome's profile
I think you could just not use the rails and attach the headboard and footboard to your own frame. Or just buy the whole set and re-sell the bed.
view Laura's profile
It is cheaper to buy a new mattress.
view gabriel_s's profile
If you're not concerned with getting money for the full size mattress, you can also Freecycle it - someone who wants/needs it will almost certainly offer to come pick it up from you in a couple of days! I just got rid of some boxsprings that way.
view gingermiller531's profile
Wakefield Shmakefield, I looked up their website and don't see what's so special about it - the usual revival of what was alredy ugly in the 60s. AT condones painting Chippendale tables hot pink, yet cutting a footboard of this eyesore in half is a sacrilege?
view bromelia's profile
As someone who is temporarily sleeping on a full sized bed in a queen sized frame, the opposite situation from your own with an interesting set of issues, I suggest that you pass on the full sized bed unless you are willing to downsize. It is simply not possible to make a queen sized mattress fit properly on a smaller full sized bed frame. Given that you are proposing to buy an antique, modifying the bed will only serve to compromise the bed's value, structural integrity and design. Let the bed go to someone who can utilize it best as it is and wait for the opportunity to buy a queen sized Heywood-Wakefield bed.
view John H's profile
Even as a lover of MCM, bromelia has a good point :)
view Miss Jess's profile
Buy the whole set and sell the bed...simple. The only other sensible option is to get a smaller mattress and deal.
view ChrisGal's profile
With vintage bed frames the issue is really the length. If the side rails aren't standard you may need to have them cut and welded. I recently did this with my full sized antique iron bed and it works great!
view uberest's profile
John H-
I may be mistaken, but I don't think Heywood-Wakefield made queen size beds in the 40s/50s.
view aums's profile
Also, there's an interesting dichotomy among people responding to this question. Half of us refer to the mattress options as queen or full "size" and the other half chooses "sized." Which is correct? I think it's "size."
view aums's profile