Bedding Collections
Pom Pom at Home organizes products into coordinating bedding families. Each family includes sheets, shams, duvet covers, and throws in matching fabrics and colors. The Chatham, Harbour, Nantucket, and Ojai lines feature matelasse (jacquard-woven, quilted texture) in cotton. Blake, June, Kelly, and Owen are cotton-linen blends with a relaxed drape. Montauk and Parker use pure linen for maximum softness that improves with washing. Brussels and Logan offer crisp cotton percale for a smoother, hotel-style finish. Mix within a family for a coordinated look, or combine across families for a layered, collected bed.
Fabric Types
Linen pieces (Montauk, Parker, Vancouver, Carlyle) start slightly textured and soften significantly with each wash — they are the most breathable option for warm sleepers. Cotton percale (Brussels, Logan, Hunter, Sheena) has a crisp, cool hand-feel with a matte finish. Cotton-linen blends (Blake, Chatham, Harbour, June, Kelly, Owen, Rory) balance the crispness of cotton with the texture of linen. Matelasse weaves (Chatham, Harbour, Nantucket, Ojai) have a raised pattern that adds weight and warmth without bulk. Select styles incorporate velvet (Charlie, Luke, Murphy) or silk-blend trims (Balboa, Classico, Langston) for finishing details.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I wash Pom Pom at Home bedding?
Machine wash cold on a gentle cycle. Tumble dry on low. Pom Pom at Home fabrics are pre-washed and garment-dyed, so they resist shrinking and maintain their color. Linen will wrinkle naturally — this is intentional and part of the relaxed aesthetic. Remove from the dryer promptly to minimize wrinkles. Do not use bleach or fabric softener, which can break down the natural fibers over time. Velvet-trimmed pieces should be washed inside-out.
What is the difference between garment-dyed and piece-dyed fabrics?
Pom Pom at Home uses garment dyeing on many of their products — the fabric is sewn first, then dyed as a finished piece. This creates subtle color variation and a softer hand-feel compared to piece-dyed fabrics (where the fabric is dyed before sewing). Garment dyeing also contributes to the lived-in, slightly washed appearance that defines the Pom Pom at Home look.
Which Pom Pom at Home collection is warmest?
Matelasse collections (Chatham, Harbour, Nantucket, Ojai) provide the most warmth as standalone bedding — the woven texture traps air for insulation. Wool-blend throws (Beck, River, Bruno, Brentwood) add significant warmth when layered. For year-round use, cotton-linen sheets (Blake, June) breathe well in summer and layer effectively with throws in winter. Pure linen (Montauk, Parker) is the coolest option for hot sleepers.
Do I need to buy a complete bedding set?
No. All Pom Pom at Home pieces are sold individually — sheets, shams, duvet covers, and throws are each purchased separately. This lets you mix textures and build a layered bed over time. Start with sheets and a duvet cover in one collection, then add shams and throws from complementary lines. The neutral color palette across all collections makes mixing easy.