22 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

Why choose white bed sheets?

White bed sheets create the clean, hotel-bed look that suits almost any bedroom. They photograph well in natural light, sit under any colour scheme, and signal a freshly-made bed in a way no patterned sheet can match. White is also the easiest sheet colour to keep crisp because it tolerates hot washing and oxygen-based brighteners that would fade a coloured sheet.

Will white bed sheets yellow over time?

White bed sheets yellow when they're not washed often enough at the right temperature, or when they've been washed with chlorine bleach that breaks down cotton fibres. With weekly hot washing at 60 degrees Celsius, oxygen-based brighteners instead of chlorine, and proper drying, quality cotton sheets stay white for years. Cheap sheets yellow faster because the cotton is shorter-staple and more prone to oxidation.

Percale or sateen for white bed sheets?

Percale white sheets feel crisp and cool, the hotel-bed standard. They suit warm sleepers and the look of a structured, tucked bed.

Sateen white sheets feel silkier and slightly warmer, with a subtle sheen that reads as quietly luxurious without being shiny. Both are 100% Portuguese cotton in white; the choice is texture, not quality. Many of our customers buy one set of each and switch seasonally.

What thread count are white bed sheets?

Quality white bed sheets run from 200 to 400 thread count for percale and 300 to 500 for sateen. Numbers above 400 in percale or 600 in sateen are usually inflated by counting plied threads rather than the yarn itself.

A tightly woven 300-count percale outperforms a loose 600-count in feel, breathability, and longevity. Focus on weave structure and cotton quality, not the number on the label.

How do I keep white bed sheets white?

Wash white sheets weekly at 60 degrees Celsius with a mild detergent. Use oxygen-based brighteners (sodium percarbonate) instead of chlorine bleach, which weakens cotton fibres over time.

Skip fabric softener, which leaves a film that traps yellowing. Line dry in sunlight when possible; sunlight is a natural whitener that works gently on cotton. Iron percale while slightly damp for the hotel-bed flat finish.

Are white bed sheets the same as the ones hotels use?

The cotton is the same: 100% cotton percale, woven tight, in white. The construction is the same: durable enough to handle high-temperature washing on rotation.

Commercial hotel linen is sized and finished for industrial laundering, but the underlying fabric is identical to what we make for home use. The crisp, cool feel people associate with a good hotel bed is a percale weave, washed correctly, in white.

White Bed Sheets, Made in Portugal

White is the colour every well-made bed comes back to. The hotel standard, the photograph that sells the bedroom, the sheet that doesn't compete with the duvet, the wall, or the morning light.

Ours are 100% cotton, woven in percale and sateen, in white. Percale for the crisp, cool, hotel-bed feel. Sateen for the silkier, draped surface with a quiet sheen. Sized for EU, UK, and US beds, with 35 cm pockets on the fitted sheets to handle modern mattress depths.

The cotton is woven at Lintexport in Portugal, our mill since 1967. Long-staple Portuguese cotton holds its white better than short-staple alternatives, because the fibres oxidise more slowly under repeated washing. The white is held by the structure of the cotton, not by harsh chemical bleaches that wear it out.

A €98 white fitted sheet used 200 nights a year for five years works out at five cents a night. The cheap alternative yellows in eighteen months and ends up costing more across the same span. The cotton that holds its white past its third birthday is the version that pays for itself.

Made in Portugal, since 1967. The hotel-bed white, kept hotel-bed clean.