loft beds

<p>if i decide i want to loft my bed .. will they loft my current one or will they replace it all together? how does it work exactly?</p>

<p>Sorry to intrude on your thread, but I have a question too--are lofted beds stable and sturdy? I don't really understand how it's done. I'd be nervous sleeping if I thought that if I moved too much I'd come crashing down.</p>

<p>I have a loft bed (full size, in fact) and it's pretty comfortable. My desk underneath is shaded and dark but I have enough lights and it's fine. The bed itself is sturdy and I haven't had any problems with it (and I've stayed on a twin size when I went to college orientation). I've had it for a year and the only problem I have is the fact that my ceiling's low so the bottom of the bed had to be adjusted lower so I hit my head a LOT when I try to go in/out from under the bed...</p>

<p>Well, and the fact that I'm not a morning person so whenever I wake up I have to pretty much slide down the ladder and sometimes it doesn't work so well. I fall occasinally but it doesn't hurt!</p>

<p>did your U give you a choice to loft your bed? And how did you manage to get a FULL sized bed!?</p>

<p>When I was in kindergarted to 4th grade, I had a regular twin sized bed. Then from that time to last summer, I had a queen bed. My dad was complaining that my room was too cluttered becuase of my unbelievable amount of junk, so he took me out (to IKEA) to get a loft bed although my room is not small at all. We intended to use the loft bed for my queen sized matress but the frames were only made up to a full size so we stuck to that. My brother had a full bed so he swapped matresses, and he eventually got the extra twin bed instead of putting a queen bed in his room...he has too much gaming stuff to fit one!</p>

<p>oo so you have one at home... I think lofted beds are great esp if they go high enough for you to have a desk underneath. Donno if i trust it to put a computer or anything underneath, cuz the squeaking from bunk beds scare me</p>