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JustBed Candice Divan Bed frame With Nine Vertical Panel HeadboardRegular price £249.00
£498.00Sale price -
JustBed Bea Linestyle Upholstered Bed Frame With High HeadboardRegular price £549.00
£1,098.00Sale price -
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JustBed Analogo Wingback Bed With High Floor Standing HeadboardRegular price £299.00
£598.00Sale price -
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More Adaptable Than It Looks
The assumption with a coloured bed frame is that it'll be hard to style around. Teal tends to prove that wrong. It sits comfortably next to cream and white. It works with warm beige and soft grey. Brass and gold accents feel at home beside it. Natural wood tones ground it without fighting it. Even black works if that's the direction you want to go.
What that means practically is you don't need to rethink the whole room around the bed. Keep the rest fairly simple and the teal does the work, the room ends up feeling more complete without much effort on your part.
The other thing worth knowing is that teal isn't fixed in how it reads. In rooms with lots of natural light, it feels more serene, almost coastal without being literal about it. In a darker, more layered space, it feels richer and more dramatic. That adaptability is what keeps it interesting and what makes it feel right in very different kinds of homes.
For a softer finish, a teal upholstered bed frame is probably the most popular option for good reason. Upholstery takes the edge off colour, what might otherwise feel bold ends up feeling warm and inviting. Add a padded headboard into the mix and the whole thing becomes genuinely comfortable, not just nice to look at. If you're the type who spends time in bed before sleep, reading, watching something, just winding down, you'll notice the difference.
If you want the bedroom to feel more elevated, teal velvet is hard to beat. The combination works because velvet and teal both have depth without being heavy-handed about it. The fabric catches light softly, the colour shifts slightly depending on where you're standing, and the end result is a bed that looks like it belongs in a much more expensive room. It sounds indulgent but it doesn't read that way, it reads as considered.
A teal double bed frame is also worth mentioning for people who want the colour without committing too heavily. A standard double in teal still feels distinctive, it adds character to the room without dominating it, and it works across a range of room sizes, which makes it a practical everyday option as much as a stylistic one.
Our teal collection is chosen with real bedrooms in mind. Not showroom setups, not ideal conditions, actual homes where the bed needs to look good on a Tuesday morning as much as a styled Saturday afternoon.
FAQS
Why choose teal for a bed frame?
Because it adds something that neutrals don't. Teal brings depth and personality into a room while still keeping the overall atmosphere calm. It's colour that feels intentional rather than loud.
Is teal hard to style around?
Less than you'd think. It pairs naturally with neutrals, works alongside warm wood tones, and picks up metallic accents well. Most rooms that suit a grey or cream bed will suit a teal one, the colour just makes the space feel more individual.
What's the benefit of going upholstered in teal?
Upholstery warms the colour up and makes the bed feel more welcoming. The padded headboard is a genuine comfort upgrade too, particularly if you spend time sitting up in bed in the evenings.
Is teal velvet too much for an everyday bedroom?
Not in practice, no. It sounds bold on paper but teal velvet is one of those combinations that ends up feeling softer and more refined than you'd expect. It adds richness without making the room feel overdressed.
Is a teal double bed a practical size?
Very. It's a comfortable everyday size that suits most rooms, and teal works just as well at double size as it does in a larger frame. The colour does enough to make it feel distinctive, you don't need a king-size statement piece to get the effect.