Blanket Cover
- Coverlets
may be a single layer or multiple (quilted) layers of fabric.
- They can be tucked in if you are looking for a more finished contemporary look.
- If used in combination with a Duvet, the Duvet is often folded in 3rds at the foot of the bed.
- Manufacturers of these types of products typically produce matching shams in the same textile as the Coverlet or Blanket cover.
- A
Coverlet is a smaller version of a Bedspread.
- Bedspreads are not as popular today as they once were, in part because the mattress industry has no standard thickness. Resulting in no standard as far as the height of beds.
- The “drop to the floor” traditional bedspread will need to be custom made depending on the mattress thickness and bed frame heights.
Types of Blankets:
Blankets may be classified into three basic types: conventional, thermal, and flocked polyurethane. Their characteristics are somewhat different in appearance, texture, warmth, durability, and care.
Conventional Blankets:
Conventional Blankets are usually woven with soft-twist yarns in the filling and higher-twist yarns in the warp. The yarns may be of wool, acrylic, polyester, or blends of these fibres. Blends containing nylon are also used. The fabric is heavily napped to produce a thick, close, fuzzy surface.
Although conventional blankets made of wool or wool blends are the heaviest, they are not necessarily the warmest. Those of acrylic are in the moderate price range, are relatively light in weight, and provide good warmth. Acrylic and polyester blankets are fairly durable but tend to pill with use and laundering. Wool blankets are difficult to launder because they become very heavy when wet and can also shrink considerably unless given a preshrinking finish. These blankets can be dry-cleaned. Conventional blankets tend to be the most durable type of blankets.
Thermal Blankets:
Thermal Blankets are either woven in a variation of the plain weave, such as a honeycomb pattern, or knitted in a manner that produces an open lightweight construction. The soft-twist yarns may be of cotton, wool, acrylic, polyester, or a blend of any of these fibres. The fabric is not napped.
The combination of soft-twist yarns and open construction is designed to provide air spaces to serve as insulation. However, these air spaces between the yarns are not really enclosed and there is a loss of heat by convection. This can be reduced by enclosing the blanket in a cover. Thermal blankets are better suited for lightweight or summer blankets. Of course, warmth will also vary with the type of fibre used.
Flocked Polyurethane Blankets:
Flocked Polyurethane Blankets are composed of polyurethane foam base covered with fibre flocking, usually nylon, held in position with an acrylic adhesive. They are very soft, resilient, and sometimes spongy. They tend to have a misty appearance, particularly in the lighter colors, due to the flocking. They are relatively light in weight.
The polyurethane makes these blankets more difficult to fold and drape
around the body. Although such blankets are warm for their weight, they
generally are not as warm as conventional blankets. Polyurethane blankets are
the weakest and least durable; they particularly have poor abrasion resistance
because the flock tends to rub away leaving the polyurethane exposed – which
can further abrade easily. They are best suited where heavy use and great
warmth are not mandatory. Polyurethane blankets can be safely machine washed
and machine dried.



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