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Even the most committed minimalists usually agree: you should own one good towel. Or at least something absorbent that won’t feel like exfoliating with sandpaper. The same goes for pillows, bathrobes, and - if you’re truly pushing the limits of domestic ambition - a pair of closed-toe slippers you didn’t…Even the most committed minimalists usually agree: you should own one good towel. Or at least something absorbent that won’t…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Even the most committed minimalists usually agree: you should own one good towel. Or at least something absorbent that won’t feel like exfoliating with sandpaper. The same goes for pillows, bathrobes, and - if you’re truly pushing the limits of domestic ambition - a pair of closed-toe slippers you didn’t get free from a dented spa weekend in 2014. So when a long-standing British linen supplier like Richard Haworth (est. 1876) starts offering its hotel-grade essentials direct to civilians - and slips in a £4.09 towel or a properly plump pillow that hasn’t been compressed into a shrink-wrap coma - it’s worth a look.
The Madison 600gsm towels start at just over four quid. At that price, it’s unrealistic to expect life-changing fluff. And yet, they hold their own. They’re 100% ringspun cotton and feature a neatly graphic honeycomb header, which feels like something your Airbnb host thought long and hard about before giving up and ordering a pack of six. The Madison towel absorbs well, dries in time for your next shower - and doesn’t try too hard to be plush. Currently, no code needed.
If you’ve ever slept in a slightly overpriced European boutique hotel and found yourself Googling the thread count of the sheets at 2am, Como’s 100% cotton sateen sets may feel oddly familiar. They’re plain, because real luxury knows not to shout. Sateen’s famously smooth feel comes standard, but don’t expect a high-gloss finish suitable for Instagram flat-lays. From £37.15, with no gimmicky offers attached - just the quiet confidence of fabric that can handle a 60° wash cycle without protest.
Down alternatives used to feel like sleeping on over-packaged insulation. These days, microfibre blends have stepped up - rivaling natural fills without triggering your immune system. The Microfibre Down Hypo-Allergenic Pillows clock in at £14.30 and deliver a passable-down-like loft with none of the scent of wet goose. Enclosed in a 200-thread-count cotton case, this version balances low risk and mid-range fluffiness. Not a revelation, but a sound, washable option for guest rooms or allergy-prone insomniacs.
These slippers look and feel like the sort of cozy footwear you'd wear when opening the door for a food delivery you’re too embarrassed to admit is your fourth this week. Made with coral fleece polyester, they’re warm, comfortingly padded, and clearly not meant to travel far from your kettle. Slightly under £2 if you catch the right bulk rate - meaning you could plausibly replace them every winter without guilt or ceremony.
Half cotton, half polyester, and supposedly 30% quicker drying - though we didn't measure. The £50 Pasadena robe aims to combine eco-credentials with the sort of spa-lite relaxation you tell yourself you earn by checking your emails before 9am. It's soft, presentable, and dries fast enough to support twice-daily lounging. Not revolutionary, but reliable - like a silent kettle or a fridge that doesn't beep.
At £7.77 minimum, these are the heaviest towels Haworth makes (770gsm), manufactured using Turkish cotton and dressed up with a braided header detail. They're thick, spa-grade, and about as close to a weighted blanket as a towel can come without becoming performance art. If how your towel looks folded on a shelf matters (no judgement), Fitzroy plays that game well. No discount code needed, but also none offered at the moment - this is not a sale towel. It knows its worth.
This isn’t a glossy consumer brand with flash sales every week - it’s more like accidentally wandering into the back stockroom of a hotel and being allowed to grab a few things at trade prices. The minimal packaging, emphasis on wash durability, and stubborn avoidance of trendiness is part of the charm. It’s also why a hypoallergenic pillow costs £13 and not £60, and why no influencer is telling you to "run, don't walk."
There are no special discount codes or seasonal spin - just low-key, honest pricing. Which, these days, is its own kind of luxury.
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⭐ Rating: 4.7 / 5 (31 votes)