12 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 stripes work on a bed?

Two formats age well: narrow pinstripes and wider hotel-style stripes. Restrained palettes (white with navy, cream with sage, soft pinks with green) stay timeless.

Bright high-contrast stripes are the ones that date the bedroom within a year. Avoid those.

Does Marshmellow weave stripes?

Yes, the bed line already runs them, woven at Lintexport's mill in Portugal. The same dye and finishing supply chain extends into the bedding.

Same mill, same standard, same craft as the rest of the range.

What weave for striped bedding?

Percale shows stripes crisp and matte, the hotel-bed reading. Sateen gives stripes a soft lustre. Flannel is brushed cotton, the most pigmented of the three.

Match the weave to how you sleep. The stripe rides on top of that decision.

How do I keep the contrast sharp through washing?

Wash cool to warm with similar colours. Skip fabric softener, it dulls the contrast slowly. Skip chlorine bleach entirely, it eats coloured stripes.

A gentle detergent and an occasional white-vinegar rinse keeps stripes looking the way they did the first night.

Is striped bedding a good gift?

A pillowcase pair or a duvet cover in a neutral-tone stripe makes a strong housewarming gift. Stripes add personality without being prescriptive.

Navy-and-white or cream-and-grey are the safest gifting palettes. Stronger colours work when you know the recipient.

Where is it made?

Lintexport's mill in Portugal, the textile operation working with cotton since 1967. Same cotton, same dye finishing, same standard as the rest of the bedding range.

Stripe craft from the same mill that has been at it for decades. The bedding follows.

Striped Bedding, Built to Disappear and Reappear

A stripe earns its place on a bed when it disappears into the room and reappears when you look.

Marshmellow's striped bedding is woven under Lintexport in Portugal, the textile operation working with cotton since 1967. The bath line already runs stripes from the same dye and finishing supply chain.

Pinstripes and hotel-style stripes are the two formats that work on a bed. Both in restrained palettes, white with navy, cream with sage, soft pinks. Anything brighter dates the bedroom.

Whichever direction the stripe goes, the cotton underneath stays the same. Percale for crisp matte stripes. Sateen for the soft lustrous version. Flannel for the brushed cotton winter weave.

Cost-per-night is the right frame. A €135 to €215 duvet cover used nightly across five years is cents a sleep, and outlasts the cheaper covers it quietly replaces.

Other bedding brands chase pattern as decor. We weave stripes the same way we weave everything else, to hold up after a hundred washes. Worth getting right.