Celsion vs normal Talalay. Celsion owners please chime in.
Sep 18, 2009 3:33 PM
Joined: Sep 15, 2009
Points: 15
I keep seeing in threads where someone bought Celsion latex as their top layer, but I am not really seeing any clear answers from people whether they thought the celsion provided any actual benefits over the standard Talalay (Blend or Natural).  Any owners wan't to chime in on their experience with Celsion?
Re: Celsion vs normal Talalay. Celsion owners please chime in.
Reply #1 Sep 18, 2009 4:53 PM
Location: L.A. area
Joined: Jan 18, 2008
Points: 1161
I am intrigued by this new latex product!
I don't see how it works and they don't explain it, at least not that I have found.
I found this at LI: http://latexfoam.com/index.php?did=47

I bet it's EXPENSIVE! I'd like to try a 1" or 1½" piece !

Please, anyone, if you've tried it, give us your opinion!

Also found this site about latex toppers. I did not look it over carefully but it has some info about Celsion and it has some advice about latex toppers. I did not read it yet but it looks interesting, for those interested in latex toppers. It seems not to be selling anything, which is a good thing!
http://latextoppers.com/
This message was modified Sep 18, 2009 by jimsocal
Re: Celsion vs normal Talalay. Celsion owners please chime in.
Reply #2 Sep 29, 2009 12:51 AM
Joined: Sep 29, 2009
Points: 3
I work in the industry and Celsion is not a type of latex like Talalay or Dunlop.  What it is, it is like a thermostat that helps regulate the temperature in your body while sleeping on the Latex bed.  I know Serta has it in their beds and it is a half inch of this on top of Talalay core beds.  They offer several different levels of firmness but all of them have the Celsion 1/2 inch layer in the top.
Re: Celsion vs normal Talalay. Celsion owners please chime in.
Reply #3 Sep 29, 2009 8:50 AM
Joined: Aug 21, 2009
Points: 486
This seems a little misleading.  What Celsion is, is a TYPE OF TALALAY, direct from the LI website:

http://www.latexinternational.com/index.php?did=47

I'd love to know how it works, what's different in the processing.