Kind of like Lord of the Rings, what is the best mattress out there to rule them all? Typically, as a professional mattress tester of over five years, I’d tell you it differs from person to person. But there are always the rare few models that manage to pull off the near impossible for a mattress to accomplish: being a supportive and comfortable fit for anybody, regardless of build or sleeping position. The Nolah Evolution Hybrid is one of those mattresses, and one of the rare few near-perfect beds I've tested to date. Here's why.
Light as a Feather
A commonality among Nolah mattresses is the use of something called AirFoam, which Nolah created to improve on memory foam performance factors: pressure relief, support, and durability. AirFoam is also meant to sleep cooler, since sucking in body heat is a known problem with memory foam. Can I prove that these things are actually at play when I sleep on a mattress? Scientifically, no—I can’t necessarily break out the beakers in the bedroom. But what I can tell you is that the model I regularly use, the luxury firm, does a swell job with pressure relief and lumbar support.
This mattress’s full government name used to be the “Nolah Evolution 15,” with the number denoting the full height of the mattress. It’s definitely a taller mattress, and I use a frame lower to the ground to accommodate that (and my dogs’ smaller legs). The newer iterations of the Nolah Evolution have the upgrade option of throwing on a Glacio-Tex-covered pillow top, which from other Nolah models I can tell you is very much cool to the touch. The standard pillow top’s organic cotton cover (which I have the most experience with) is breathable, but it isn’t going to give you that refrigerator-opening-blast-in-the-face coolness. The pillow top is your first pass at getting pressure relief from the mattress, and it lets the heavier areas of your body sink in a bit so they’re not chafing against the mattress. So, side sleepers, pay attention to what I’m saying here. It’s our top-tested pick for y’all for a reason!
However, the pillow top isn’t doing all the heavy lifting for temperature control and pressure relief. A “Heat Escape Gusset” encircles the pillow top, which is essentially just mesh that is supposed to let heat escape from within the pillow top. After the pillow top comes the “Zoned AirFoam HD” layer—a fancy way of saying that this layer is for advanced pressure relief due to both the foam structure and perforation.