Hampton's silhouette is clean and low-key: track arms, a compact back profile, and legs that keep the piece from reading as heavy in a room. At 86.5 inches wide, it reads as a proper king sofa, enough seating for three adults without dominating the space. The frame is positioned as a daily-use sleeper, not a weekend-guest piece.
Conversion is via the Hybrid mechanism. You set the loose back cushions aside, lift the front edge of the seat, and the back lays flat. Two steps, no tools, no dragging a metal frame out from underneath. It's fully manual, not power-assisted. Once open, the bed extends out from the wall, so you need 86.5 inches of clear floor depth to fully open it. That's the room-planning number.
The bed is a king: 76 inches wide by 80 inches long. The mattress is built into the frame at five inches thick: cold-cured, high-density HR foam certified to CertiPUR standards. Luonto rates it Daily Sleeper, meaning it's built for nightly use rather than occasional guests. The 17-inch seat height and 21.75-inch seat depth are on the moderate side; the foam isn't described as soft or firm on the source page.
The frame is solid spruce with mortise-and-tenon joinery and birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified. Made in the EU. Upholstery runs to over a hundred fabrics and over a hundred leathers; you'll configure at point of sale with an authorized retailer, with four to six weeks from order to delivery.
Hampton king is the right choice if you want a king-size bed in a frame that doesn't announce itself as a sleeper sofa. Cross-shop it against the Haven King Sofa if you want a deeper seat (Haven's 23.5-inch seat depth is nearly two inches more than Hampton's 21.75) and a Hybrid Deluxe mechanism that opens in a single lift rather than two steps. Choose Hampton if the simpler, lower-profile look is the priority.