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Which duvet: advice please!

(39 Posts)
petallus Sun 22-Jul-12 18:16:02

I want to buy a lightweight duvet for the Summer (now it seems to have arrived), probably 4.5 tog. Would like a down or feather one but can't decide if it is worth paying the extra for goosedown. My last duvet was man-made fibre but it didn't drape over the body so well.

Anybody got any advice?

Bags Sun 22-Jul-12 19:58:15

Well, I've a mixed goose and duck down one which I've had for thirty-seven years and which I'm still using, and it's fine. It's my winter one, 12 tog. At the moment I'm using a 9-tog one which will probably see me through the summer except for a few warm nights which may occur sometime. Whopping 15°C max here today and below 10° at night. On very cold winter nights, I wear a cashmere jumper over my pjs, and socks, and a hat (well, it's a snoody thing, actually). Snug as the proverbial bug smile.

So, in short, down duvets are good value, I think, though an expensive outlay initially.

granjura Sun 22-Jul-12 20:02:58

We have a down duvet, and we love it. But since we bought it we found that there is a lot of cruelty involved in down harvesting- mostly in Eastern Europe, where geese are plucked naked, alive, about 5 times in their lifetime before being gassed. Sorry about this- but it really upset me.

DD and OH bought a silk duvet a couple of years back and they say it is wonderful. Warm in winter, cool in Summer, light and totally allergy free. Expensive but they say worth it.

Bags Sun 22-Jul-12 20:13:29

jura, [shocked]. Gosh! I didn't know that either. Oh dear!

Ariadne Sun 22-Jul-12 20:23:05

Hollow fibre quilts drape very well; both our quilts (summer and winter) are from IKEA and are lasting very well.

jeni Sun 22-Jul-12 20:28:46

A silk duvet sounds great! I've never seen one! Any information please?

granjura Sun 22-Jul-12 20:43:22

www.silksleep.com

Lots of adverts and info on Google.

Elegran Sun 22-Jul-12 20:44:53

What happens to silkworms to get silk is as bad as what happens to the geese granjura was telling us about.

petallus Sun 22-Jul-12 20:47:36

Oh granjura that sounds ghastly. The most expensive ones in JL seem to be from Eastern Europe.

I do care about that kind of thing. I already have a 10.5 tog goose down duvet which I've had for years. I might look into silk or hollow fibre now.

Anagram Sun 22-Jul-12 20:50:18

What happens to silkworms, Elegran?
Our duvets are all synthetic and I have no complaints!

Bez Sun 22-Jul-12 20:53:39

My friend has a silk filled duvet she bought when she was doing a walk along the great wall of China for a charity - she says they are beautifully warm but because they are thin you expect them to be the same as a summer weight - eventually for the worst of the winter they had to resort to thicker and heavier type - a mental thing really.

JessM Sun 22-Jul-12 21:06:35

"silkworms" at that point in the proceedings are pupae, filled with caterpillar soup.
I like my silk duvet.
i like sleeping under micro fibre blankets even better, really soft, light and they don't seem to build up heat like duvets.

johanna Sun 22-Jul-12 21:17:50

Here is another address for you jeni

www.gingerly.co.uk

I got ours from there. Fabulous.Plenty of choice ,tog wise, and beautifully made.

granjura Sun 22-Jul-12 21:22:29

I really do not think that the gassing of silkworms can be compared with repeated live plucking of geese in factory farms, sorry.
Plenty of videos and info on Google- but won't post any links as they are NOT for the faint hearted.

petallus Sun 22-Jul-12 22:50:26

I hear silk duvets are lovely except you can't wash or dry clean them.

Bags Mon 23-Jul-12 05:57:32

I wonder if that's because of the way the silk fibres are laid inside the quilt, and not anchored down very much, so washing would scrunch everything up too much? Because silk is washable. Dry cleaning is not advised for any kind of duvet.

JessM Mon 23-Jul-12 06:30:20

I think you are right about the silk fibres Bags . They suggest hanging them out in the sun occasionally (yeh-well, this week then) - UV light has a very strong antibacterial effect.

petallus Mon 23-Jul-12 08:37:03

Good old John Lewis! Just googled goose down and cruelty and up came a statement from JL saying they ensure all their down is a by-product of the food industry. They do not use any live-plucked down.

Good! Now I can buy a goose down duvet!

Bags Mon 23-Jul-12 08:53:03

That's good to know, petal! I had always assumed that was the case and am glad to find it still is for good merchants.

granjura Mon 23-Jul-12 12:01:37

I wrote to the White Company to ask them about their policy about live plucking, and they never replied. So came to my own conclusion and won't use them again.

Nonu Mon 23-Jul-12 12:55:22

In the Summer I just take the duvet out of the cover , which we then sleep under , seems to warm enough for us . If it does get a bit chippy , there"s a little opportunity to have a snuggle up wink

MrsJamJam Mon 23-Jul-12 18:17:32

Very relieved that I bought my down duvet from JL. Our summer one is 3tog and it is plenty warm enough.

petallus Mon 23-Jul-12 19:38:05

I'm going in to JL tomorrow to get a 2.5 tog goose down duvet.

I find just the duvet cover with nothing in it gets all tangled up.

Jess25 Mon 10-Nov-14 21:42:12

Here's one more address for you:

www.jasminesilk.com/

The quality is great. By the way, silk linen will be cool in summer,so it means comfortable for you smile

durhamjen Mon 10-Nov-14 22:38:28

I'd rather silkworms turned into moths. This is how silk is made.

www.infonet-biovision.org/