A reference on sleep environment design for Canadian homes
Mattress selection, bedroom layout, light and temperature control — collected here as practical, evidence-based reference material for anyone setting up or adjusting a sleep space in Canada.
Current Articles
Three focused guides covering the main variables that determine sleep environment quality in Canadian residential settings.
Mattress Guide
How to Choose a Mattress in Canada
Innerspring, memory foam, latex, and hybrid mattresses compared — with Canadian-specific guidance on trial periods, certifications, and climate factors.
Light & Temperature
Controlling Light and Temperature in the Bedroom
How ambient temperature and light spectrum affect sleep onset and quality — and practical approaches across Canada's climate zones.
Bedroom Layout
Bedroom Layout and Its Effect on Rest
Bed placement, clearance requirements, storage decisions, and how spatial arrangement shapes the sleep environment in Canadian homes of all sizes.
Mattress materials and Canadian winters
Memory foam stiffens in rooms below 18°C — common in older Canadian housing stock overnight. Latex responds consistently across temperature ranges. If your bedroom drops below that threshold, material choice is not just a comfort question.
Read the Mattress Guide15–19°C
The ambient bedroom temperature range most consistently associated with faster sleep onset and deeper slow-wave sleep in adult research subjects.
Blackout vs. block-out
True blackout fabric blocks 99%+ of light. Many "blackout" products in Canadian retail are block-out at 85–95%. The difference matters at northern latitudes in summer.
60 cm minimum
The recommended clearance on at least one long side of a bed — enough to exit without turning sideways. Many secondary bedrooms in Canadian condominiums fall below this with a Queen mattress in place.
What this resource focuses on
Morning Linen covers the physical conditions of the sleep environment: the mattress, the room's thermal state, its light conditions, and its layout. The scope is narrow deliberately — there is enough in those four areas to fill a practical, useful reference without expanding into general wellness territory.
About Morning LinenLight at northern latitudes
At 55°N — roughly Edmonton — civil twilight extends past 10 p.m. in June and July. The sky begins lightening before 4 a.m. Without proper window coverage, summer sunrise becomes an unintended alarm for anyone whose bedroom faces east or south-east.
Light & Temperature GuideQuestions about the content?
Corrections, additional questions, or topic requests can be directed to the team at Morning Linen Media Inc. Responses are typically within two to three business days.
Contact