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Collection 02 · Verified July 2026

Sheets, towels & blankets from American mills

American textile manufacturing nearly vanished — but a handful of mills held the line, and a new generation of farm-to-home brands is bringing it back. These are the makers who still grow, spin, weave, and sew domestically.

The Verified List

Our picks, thread by thread

Farm to Bed Moulton, Alabama

Red Land Cotton Sheets & Towels

Cotton grown on the family's own North Alabama farm and kept in the USA from seed to final stitch. Crisp heirloom percale and plush 620-GSM towels.

≈ $100–$300 Shop Red Land →
Classic Percale Thomaston, Georgia

American Blossom Linens

West Texas cotton, woven and sewn by Thomaston Mills (est. 1899). Note: the Classic line is now a 55/45 USA cotton/organic blend — a change the brand disclosed openly, which is exactly the transparency we like.

≈ $180–$320 / set Shop American Blossom →
Seed to Stitch California cotton · woven in GA & the Carolinas

Authenticity 50 Sheets & Towels

100% traceable Supima supply chain — California family farms, Georgia spinning, Carolina weaving. Their 800-GSM towels are five-star-resort plush.

≈ $150–$350 Shop Authenticity 50 →
Heirloom Wool Faribault, Minnesota

Faribault Mill Blankets

One of the last vertical woolen mills in America, weaving since 1865. For every bed blanket sold, they donate one to youth experiencing homelessness.

≈ $200–$350 Shop Faribault →
Monmouth, Maine

Brahms Mount Cotton & Linen Throws

Woven on antique shuttle looms in Maine. Complex weaves, restful natural hues — living history you can nap under.

≈ $200–$450 Shop Brahms Mount →
Frankenmuth, Michigan

Frankenmuth Woolen Mill Comforters

Wool-filled comforters and toppers hand-tied between organic cotton muslin since 1894 — the anti-polyester duvet.

≈ $150–$500 Shop Frankenmuth →
Buyer Beware

Many beloved "American" bedding brands are American in address only: Boll & Branch weaves in India and Portugal, Brooklinen manufactures internationally, and 1888 Mills — one of the last U.S. terrycloth plants — closed its Griffin, Georgia factory in April 2024. "Designed in New York" is a design credit, not a birthplace.

Read the full sheets guide → The towels guide →