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Soft, breathable, and ridiculously comfy—our bedding collection makes every night feel special. 

Percale – Cool, crisp, and airy for hot sleepers.

Sateen – Smooth, silky, and perfect for snuggling year-round.

Flannel – Cozy, warm, and brushed for extra softness.

 

 


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FAQs about Bedding

Why choose linen for a queen duvet cover?

Linen breathes differently to cotton. The fibre is hollow at the core, which lets warm air move through it and pulls humidity off the skin. The result is a duvet that sleeps cool in summer and warm in winter, with the same cover.

Linen also softens with every wash rather than wearing thin. A good queen linen cover gets better in year three than it was on night one.

What size is a queen linen duvet cover?

A queen duvet cover sits at roughly 230 by 220 cm, sized to fit a queen duvet with a small allowance for tucking. EU, UK and US queen sizes are close but not identical, and the right cover for a UK queen is not the right cover for a US queen.

Each product page lists the exact dimensions before checkout. If the duvet is between two sizes, the larger cover sleeps better.

Does linen need ironing?

No. The whole point of a linen duvet cover is the soft, lived-in look. Press it flat and you lose the texture that makes linen worth choosing.

Pull it from the line or the dryer while it is still slightly damp and smooth the worst creases by hand. The bed looks intentional within a minute, not laundered to within an inch of its life.

Where is the linen finished?

Every queen linen duvet cover is cut, sewn and finished in Portugal, under Lintexport's nearly sixty-year textile operation. The know-how that runs through the cotton lines runs through the linen too.

The combination of long-wear linen and the hands that have been finishing fabric since 1967 is what separates a duvet cover that lasts from one that does not.

How do I care for a queen linen duvet cover?

Wash cool at 30 degrees with a normal amount of detergent and no fabric softener. Softener leaves a coating on linen that dulls the natural finish.

Tumble dry on low and remove while slightly damp, or hang dry indoors. Do not bleach.

Is a linen duvet cover worth the price?

Linen lasts. Spread the price across three to five years of nightly use and the queen linen cover costs cents per sleep, often less than the cheaper covers it quietly replaces.

The cover also looks more considered as it ages, which is rarely true of cheaper alternatives.

Queen Linen Duvet Covers, Built to Soften

A queen linen duvet cover is one of the few bedding pieces that improves with age. The first wash takes the slight stiffness out of the weave. The tenth wash gives it the softness that makes linen famous. The hundredth, and the cover still holds its shape on the bed.

Marshmellow's queen linen duvet covers are cut from long-wear linen, chosen for the long, strong fibre that takes decades of use.

Each cover is finished on Lintexport's looms, the textile operation that has been at it since 1967. The closures are sized to hold the duvet without bunching, and the colour is set into the fibre rather than printed on top.

Linen breathes both ways. It moves warm air out in summer and traps a thin layer of warm air close to the body in winter. The same queen cover works across the year for sleepers who do not want to swap their bedding twice a season.

Pair the queen linen cover with our percale or sateen pillowcases for textural contrast, or layer it across linen pillowcases for a coherent, slightly rumpled look that reads as quietly grown-up.

The right cover gets better. Built to soften, built to hold.