by Alexey | Crafts Decor Workshop Furniture Cheap | Tuesday, August 15, 2017
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IKEA Kura children's beds have gained popularity for their simplicity and practicality, like many IKEA . There are many interesting ideas for transforming this bed, which will suit both little princesses and young knights. Make-Self.net has collected for you the 50 best ideas that you can bring to life.
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There is an option that someone will not want to buy a bed in a store because of the high price or the desire to make it themselves. And you will be right. Why overpay if you can assemble it from ordinary pine timber purchased at a hardware store. The quality will not match the factory one, but you will save a lot of money. The choice is yours, friends!
Not quite what you need? Design as you like!
Use our design software to create your own combination
The sleeping area can be upstairs or downstairs, just turn the bed over.
A slatted bed bottom is included.
Mattress and bed linen are sold separately.
Combines with KYURA canopy.
To avoid getting your child's head pinched and causing serious injury, the distance between the bed and the wall should always be less than 6.5 cm or greater than 23 cm.
The maximum load refers to the static load, which is the weight that the bed can support when lying or sitting on it.
The maximum load refers to the static load, which is the weight that the bed can support when lying or sitting on it.
Availability: Out of stock
brief information
The sleeping area can be upstairs or downstairs, just turn the bed over. A slatted bed bottom is included. Mattress and bed linen are sold separately. The mattress thickness should be max.
Size : 90×200 cm
Delivery to Minsk
Product dimensions
Length: 209 cm Width: 99 cm Height: 116 cm Mattress length: 200 cm Mattress width: 90 cm
Self-assembly is required, or you can order this service from our store
Accompanying documents. (Download PDF)
KYURA Operation Manual. You can only download the latest versions of documents. This means there may be differences between this version of the file and the printed version.
vendor code | Assembly instructions |
802.538.09 | KURA Double-sided bed (PDF) |
Manicure table in Ikea?
Why not. There is no separate series for these purposes, but there is unique furniture that fits perfectly into the working category. This includes, for example, Mikke. It has a large selection of desks with a minimum of details; just such a table can be used for manicures or other manual work.
As a pleasant and functional addition to the desktop for manicure, Ikea offers to purchase a table lamp for manicure. We advise you to take a closer look at Tertial lamps. They are equipped with a convenient flexible support part and can be tilted or raised depending on the required lighting angle. It would seem that the idea is obvious, but not as standard as it might be at first glance. Many interior items or furniture from Ikea can be used for dual purposes: both for relaxation and for work.
The manicurist, like the client, needs comfortable furniture to sit on. Ikea will help with this too. Pay attention to the Skolberg or Henriksdal series of chairs - they are soft and comfortable, and are also produced in trendy colors, have a beautiful shape and are very comfortable to sit on. Any work chair can be made even more comfortable by placing a special soft pillow on it, for example, from the Bertil, Gabrike, Etla or Hillared series.
Let's turn to another functional series: Kyura from Ikea. This series includes the following products:
- double-sided wooden bed (can be turned over, and then the sleeping place is placed at the bottom, and not at the top, and the base beams serve as an excellent frame for making a children's playhouse);
- canopy for a Cure crib with drapery or a regular one, in the form of a semicircular roof (an accessory with the help of which an ordinary frame bed turns into a play area for a baby, cozy and small, in which he will play all day and will gladly invite friends there, put dolls there or soft toys).
Photo ideas for placement in the interior
Read: Modern models of chandeliers and lamps from IKEA in interior design (100 photos)
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Dimensions
The IKEA brand has been producing only single loft beds for the last few years. All of these series are equipped with one lounger. Let's look at the dimensions of loft beds (LxWxH):
- STUVA – 207x99x179 cm;
- TUFFING – 208x97x179 cm;
- SVERTA – 208x97x179 cm;
- KURA – 209x99x116 cm;
- VITVAL – 207x97x162 cm.
The maximum load for any of them is up to 100 kg.
Dinosaur bed from IKEA KURA bed
Dad makes a fabulous dinosaur bed for his daughter's big room.
With the arrival of baby #2, my wife and I knew it would only be a matter of time before we would need to move our daughter Anna out of her current sleeping area—the crib.
Since we knew that our lives would be focused on the Baby for the foreseeable future (and I read somewhere that she might resent a newborn if she saw her bed moving like an eviction), we decided to ask Anna if she wanted "big girl" bed, and what kind of bed she would like.
Honestly, I didn't expect the answer: "Dinosaur Bed!! "
IKEA items used:
- Double sided bed KURA
- Mattress
- GREAT sheets/blankets
- Dinosaur Bed Tent
- TROFAST steps
Other materials and tools:
- MDF (2x 6mm, 1x 12mm thick) 1.2m x 2.4m - walls and door
- Wood slats for pallets - decoration
- Ground bends - handrails
Tools:
- Puzzle
- Router
- Drill
- Paint brushes
- "Projector"
- Glue gun
Instructions for the Dino bed:
Review
Cut MDF sheets to size on each side of KURA.
Cut out a dinosaur shape on the front panel to resemble a door and paint it.
Painted MDF (brown outside, chalky inside)
Sand and paint the TROFAST block brown.
Assemble and attach the side panels and TROFAST.
Added safety railings to the stairs (cut bark and sanded pieces of wood taken from the garden).
Railings (sanded and stained pallet wood) have been added to the KURA top bunk.
Complete with den light, wood trim and leaf decorations
Total cost: £471
Dinosaur Bed hack details
After a lot of research (we looked at a lot of options, from just getting dinosaur blankets to somehow creating a 3D dinosaur with a bed inside it), we fell down the rabbit hole that is ikeahackers.net and got a ton of inspiration.
I really liked the idea that the KURA bed could be used to create a bed/den combination. So the design began to take shape.
To make sure everything was as accurate as possible, I built the KURA on the outside and measured and cut the panels. I'm glad I did this because I almost forgot to add the thickness of the end panels on top of the length of the KURA so the side panels would be the right size!
The first step in proper preparation after taking measurements was to prime and paint the MDF panels. I decided that to create a Jungle Dinosaur theme, I would just use a simple brown color on one side (the outside). And to add some fun to her den, I would use chalkboard paint on the other side (inside).
I brought my daughter here to get her into bed a little more, plus she loves to draw. (Although I'm not sure what she meant when I asked if she wanted to draw). While we were at it, we drew TROFAST.
Making a dinosaur door
Next was the difficult task of opening the door correctly.
I had an image that I wanted to use, but the artist didn't. So, armed with some knowledge of science, a box, a random magnifying glass I found, and my phone, I made a homemade projector and sketched out the design on MDF. I'm both surprised and very pleased at how well this worked!
Projecting an image onto MDF
I cut this door with a jigsaw, painted it, re-worked the pieces, and finished the edges so that it would fit into the hole when I closed it. (I also removed about 3 or 4mm from the bottom so it opens and closes smoothly).
Naturalness with handrail
Using pallet slats and tree branches that we salvaged from our garden, I began working on the additional pieces.
My favorite part of the entire bed is the rails.
I love how well it turned out and it was a bit of an afterthought. I used a lot of sanding and then applied oak varnish. Despite the fact that almost all the pieces of wood here were from different types of wood, the varnish combined them well.
Once the preparation was complete (I know! It was all preparation!), all that was left was to simply move everything into her room and put it all together. It was actually really simple: assembling the bed, screwing the side panels and gluing/screwing the wood pieces and TROFAST into place.
As a finishing touch, I bought a lot of fake leaves earlier and, armed with a glue gun, we had fun sticking them around the bed. I also made a "spy hole" in the wall of the den and used these leaves to partially hide it.
For the lair
I cut a hole in the side panel that matches the highest step of the TROFAST so that the storage containers can be pulled inside. It can also be used as a temporary entrance/exit.
To make the room cheerful and give some light, I bought a remote control strip (5m) and attached it around the bed frame. We practically had a rave as Anna excitedly showed me which color of light she liked best.
As another afterthought, I used some chalkboard MDF scraps to attach to the KURA frame and make the bookshelves. This has been great with my daughter who now wants all the bedtime stories in her den... not so much with my claustrophobic wife...
The IKEA Dino tent, T-Rex and Sheets really brought the whole thing together. Our daughter really loves the new bed. And it has transformed her room from a place where her clothes/toys live to a place where she enjoys spending time!