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Honored Contributor
Posts: 41,007
Registered: ‎05-22-2016

Sheex are 90% poly with 10% spandex. If you thought microfiber sheets were hot...

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,120
Registered: ‎03-29-2019

@ALRATIBA wrote:

@Anonymous032819 

 

I just remembered .... there's been a commercial running on TV for something called Sheetz (I think that's how it's spelled.)

 

In fact, your post sounds very much like the dialogue in the commercial!  Smiley Wink

 


 

 

 

 

 

@ALRATIBA 

 

 

 

The commercial is for a company called Sheex.

 

 

 

Queen set runs $200.

 

 

That's out of my price range.

The Sky looks different when you have someone you love up there.
Valued Contributor
Posts: 651
Registered: ‎02-08-2016

Organic bamboo hands down. Softer than any expensive cotton HTC sheets. Make sure blanket is cotton, as polyester can make you hot.

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Honored Contributor
Posts: 30,249
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

I’m a “ sheet snob” only in that I get my sheets dry cleaned.

 

I like them heavily starched with no wrinkles.  With that in mind, my preference is 800-1000 thread count cotton because they hold the starch better and stays stiff longer.

 

I think it’s a little like a personal preference.  

Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,482
Registered: ‎05-30-2010

Re: Best Sheets?

[ Edited ]

Annabellethecat, dry cleaned - really, how often? Once a week at least I hope.

BTW: it's not about thread count. Quality of fabric.

FYI..................................

 

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,120
Registered: ‎03-29-2019

Thank-you everyone for all of your wonderful suggestions.

 

I'm trying to find sheets that cost $100 or less.

 

 

Spending 3 or $400 or more on sheets, well, it had better come with someone to tuck me in at night.

 

 

The Sky looks different when you have someone you love up there.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 16,837
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: Best Sheets?

[ Edited ]

@ahoymate wrote:

Annabellethecat, dry cleaned - really, how often? Once a week at least I hope.

BTW: it's not about thread count. Quality of fabric.

FYI..................................

 

 

That was an excellent article @ahoymate .  I have some Peacock Alley 400 thread count sateen sheets, and they are wonderful.  I don't like a higher thread count than that.  I find them too stiff and heavy.


The Bluebird Carries The Sky On His Back"
-Henry David Thoreau





Honored Contributor
Posts: 26,694
Registered: ‎10-03-2011

I don't like microfiber or blends at all.  They're either hot or get pilled.  I go for 100% cotton, usually a low thread count.  I honestly don't care about wrinkles.  Who's going to see them but me and DH?  My most recent purchases have been the Catherine Zeta Jones 400 TC (very nice) and today I ordered a set of the Nothern Nights 400 TC Wrinkle Defense, which are a gift for someone.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 7,652
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Icegoddess , see below re wrinkle free sheets.  Source:  New York Times.  I am leery of the use of chemicals in clothing.  We spend a lot of time sleeping.  How many times have we done something for a long time only to find out years later it was not risk free?  LM

 

 

 

The iron, that relic of households past, is no longer required to look neat and freshly pressed. Why bother when retailers like Nordstrom offer crisp “wrinkle-free finish” dress shirts and L. L. Bean sells chinos that are “great right out of the dryer.”

Though it is not obvious from the label, the antiwrinkle finish comes from a resin that releases formaldehyde, the chemical that is usually associated with embalming fluids or dissected frogs in biology class.

And clothing is not the only thing treated with the chemical. Formaldehyde is commonly found in a broad range of consumer products and can show up in practically every room of the house. The sheets and pillow cases on the bed. The drapes hanging in the living room. The upholstery on the couch. In the bathroom, it can be found in personal care products like shampoos, lotions and eye shadow. It may even be in the baseball cap hanging by the back door.

Most consumers will probably never have a problem with exposure to formaldehyde, though it can have serious health implications for people who work with the chemical in factories. The biggest potential issue for those wearing wrinkle-resistant clothing can be a skin condition called contact dermatitis. It affects a small group of people and can cause itchy skin, rashes and blisters, according to a recent government study on formaldehyde in textiles. Still, some critics said more studies on a wider array of textiles and clothing chemicals were needed, including a closer look at the effects of cumulative exposure. At the very least, they said, better labeling would help.

“From a consumer perspective, you are very much in the dark in terms of what clothing is treated with,” said David Andrews, a senior scientist at the Environmental Working Group, a research and advocacy organization. “In many ways, you’re in the hands of the industry and those who are manufacturing our clothing. And we are trusting them to ensure they are using the safest materials and additives.”

 

The United States does not regulate formaldehyde levels in clothing, most of which is now made overseas. Nor does any government agency require manufacturers to disclose the use of the chemical on labels. So sensitive consumers may have a hard time avoiding it (though washing the clothes before wearing them helps).

Honored Contributor
Posts: 8,970
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

My mother’s been gone for over 10 years, and I STILL have some of her percale pillow cases, and BELIEVE ME, I don‘t baby them!

 

My personal favorite bed sheets are knits that I bought a while ago on the Q as a LTS. I would buy more but “no longer available”!

 

I too “sleep hot” and DH “sleeps cold”. We’re really compatible in other ways though!