26 products

 

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.

 

 


FAQs about Bedding

What sheets do hotels actually use?

Most good hotels use 100% cotton percale or sateen cotton-rich blends in white. Both weaves start with the same raw material — the difference is in how the threads are crossed.

Percale is a one-over-one-under weave. The result is crisp, cool, and matte. It holds its shape and colour after repeated high-temperature washing, which is why it's the workhorse of the hospitality industry. Thread counts typically sit between 200 and 400. A tightly woven 300-thread-count percale outperforms a loosely woven 600-count in feel, breathability, and durability. The feel people associate with a hotel bed — that clean, pressed crispness — is almost always percale cotton at around 300 thread count, washed many times and pressed flat.

Sateen uses a four-over-one-under weave, which brings more thread surface to the top of the fabric. The result is softer to the touch, with a subtle sheen and a draped, silky weight. Boutique and luxury hotels reach for sateen when they want bedding that reads as indulgent rather than crisp. It sleeps slightly warmer than percale and has a more delicate surface, but at a good thread count in a quality cotton, it launders well and holds up over time.

The choice between them is about feel, not quality. Percale for cool and crisp. Sateen for soft and smooth. Both are what a well-made hotel bed is built from.

What thread count are hotel sheets?

Most hotel sheets run between 200 and 400 thread count. Thread count measures how many threads are woven into one square inch of fabric. Above 400, thread counts are often inflated by counting individual plied threads rather than the yarn itself. A tightly woven 250-thread-count percale sheet will outperform a loosely woven 600-count sheet in feel, breathability, and how it holds over time. Focus on the weave type and the cotton quality, not the number on the label.

What is the difference between percale and sateen for hotel sheets?

Percale is the classic hotel choice: a plain, tight weave that gives the sheet a crisp, matte finish and excellent breathability. It softens with washing but never loses its structured feel. Sateen has a silkier surface and a subtle sheen, warmer and slightly softer against the skin. Hotels favour percale because it launders well at higher temperatures and presses flat quickly. At home, both work well. Percale for the cool, crisp hotel feel. Sateen if you prefer something warmer and silkier.

How do hotels keep their sheets so white?

A combination of hot washing at 60 degrees C or higher, commercial-grade detergents, and oxygen-based whiteners rather than chlorine bleach. Chlorine bleach whitens initially but breaks down cotton fibres over time. At home, washing white percale sheets at 60 degrees C occasionally, with oxygen bleach when needed, maintains the white without degrading the fabric. Line drying in sunlight is a natural whitener that is gentler on the cotton than heat.

Can I buy the same sheets hotels use?

Yes. Commercial hotel linen is not a separate product category. It is 100% cotton percale in white, made to durability standards that handle industrial laundering. Our hotel sheets collection uses the same specifications: tight percale weave, 100% cotton, built to hold after repeated high-temperature washing. The cotton is the same. The construction is the same. The only difference in a hotel context is the volume ordered.

How do I care for hotel-quality sheets at home?

Wash at 40-60 degrees C depending on how firmly you want to maintain the white. Use a mild detergent without fabric softener: softener reduces breathability and removes the crisp feeling from percale over time. Line dry or tumble dry low. Iron percale while slightly damp if you want the flat, hotel-smooth surface. Sateen needs less ironing. The sheets improve in feel with each wash in the first year and then hold steady.

Hotel Sheets, Woven in Portugal

The feel people describe as a hotel bed is almost always the same thing: percale cotton, pulled tight over a firm mattress, washed and pressed flat. That is not a secret formula. It is a weave.

The sheet your skin presses against in a good hotel is 100% cotton percale, around 250-300 thread count, in white. It is crisp because the weave is tight. It is cool because cotton breathes. It is white because it gets washed correctly.

Ours are made in Portugal, in the same mill we have been running since 1967. The percale and sateen in our hotel sheets range are made to the same specifications as commercial hotel linen: the same cotton, the same weave, the same construction.

For the full look: hotel bedding sets everything on the bed. White bedding if you want to build the palette from scratch.

Shop by bed size: queen bedding or king bedding.

Other sheets promise the hotel experience. Ours are made to the same standard that delivers it. Made in Portugal, since 1967.