About Linen

About Linen

The oldest textile fiber in human history.
Still the best one for your bathroom.

LITHUANIA FLAX FIELDS

Where it begins: the flax field

Linen comes from Linum usitatissimum — flax — a plant that has clothed and sheltered humans for over 30,000 years. It grows in cool, temperate climates without irrigation. No pesticides required. No synthetic fertilizers. The plant pulls what it needs from the soil and rainwater, leaving the land better than it found it.

Our flax is grown in Lithuania — one of the last regions in the world where traditional flax cultivation has been maintained at scale. The cool Baltic climate produces fibers with exceptional tensile strength and a natural luster that synthetic materials spend billions trying to replicate.

↳ Lithuania · EU-regulated farming · No irrigation · Pesticide-free

How linen is made

From stem to towel — a process that hasn’t fundamentally changed in centuries

01 — Harvest

Flax is harvested by pulling the entire plant — roots and all — to preserve the full length of the fiber. Longer fibers produce finer, stronger linen.

02 — Retting

The harvested stalks are soaked in water (dew-retted or water-retted) to loosen the outer woody casing. This is what separates the long bast fibers from the rest of the plant.

03 — Weaving

The processed fibers are spun into yarn and woven on looms. Our waffle weave structure creates a raised grid pattern that dramatically increases surface area — the key to its fast-drying performance.

OEKO-TEX

04 — Certification

Every batch is tested to OEKO-TEX Standard 100 — verifying it’s free from over 100 harmful substances. Not a marketing claim. A third-party laboratory certification.

Why waffle weave?

Most towels use terry weave — dense loops that feel plush but trap moisture and take hours to dry. Waffle weave works differently. The raised grid pattern creates hundreds of small pockets that pull moisture away from skin through capillary action, then release it rapidly into the air.

The result: a towel that dries your skin faster, dries itself in under an hour, and never develops the musty smell that haunts cotton terry towels kept in humid bathrooms.

Paired with flax linen — which naturally resists bacterial growth through its pectin content — waffle weave creates the most hygienic bath textile available without any chemical treatment.

WAFFLE WEAVE STRUCTURE Raised grid pocket — 220 GSM pure flax Increased surface area = faster moisture release Natural pectin layer = antibacterial without treatment

The properties that matter

Dries 3× faster

Linen wicks moisture away from the body and releases it into the air faster than any other natural textile. Your towel is dry within the hour. Cotton takes all day — and in humid climates, never fully dries between uses.

Naturally antibacterial

Flax fibers contain natural pectin — a compound that inhibits bacterial and fungal growth without any chemical treatment. This is why linen towels don’t develop the musty smell that develops in cotton within days.

Gets better with age

Every wash relaxes and softens the fiber structure. After 10–20 washes, linen reaches peak softness while retaining full structural integrity. Cotton peaks at purchase and degrades from there. Linen peaks at year two.

OEKO-TEX certified

Third-party tested and certified free from over 100 harmful substances including pesticide residues, heavy metals, and formaldehyde. Safe for sensitive skin. Safe for children. Safe for daily use.

ENVIRONMENTAL FOOTPRINT COMPARISON Cotton 10,000L water / kg Linen ~1,700L water / kg AVERAGE LIFESPAN Cotton 1–3 years Linen 10–20+ years Flax sequesters carbon during growth · Biodegrades fully at end of life

The honest sustainability case

Linen uses roughly 6× less water to produce than cotton. Flax grows without irrigation in Northern Europe’s natural rainfall. It requires no pesticides to thrive. The roots return nitrogen to the soil after harvest, improving the land for the next crop.

But the most underrated sustainability argument for linen is longevity. A cotton towel lasts 1–3 years before pilling and degrading. A linen towel, well cared for, lasts 10–20 years. That means fewer replacements, less manufacturing, less shipping, less waste. The math isn’t close.

At end of life, pure linen is fully biodegradable. No microplastics. No synthetic residue. Just fiber returning to the soil it came from.

Start with one towel.

Try it for 30 days. Wash it twice. If you don’t feel the difference, we’ll refund you — no forms, no friction.

What you can use linen towels for

A quick-dry linen towel works in places cotton struggles. Five real use cases.

As a travel towel

A compact travel towel that weighs a third of cotton. Packs flat, dries in an hour, never develops mildew in a damp travel bag. The lightweight linen towel for travel that fits any carry-on.

As a beach towel

A linen beach towel sheds sand instead of holding it. Quick-dry after a swim; the same towel is ready to use again 30 minutes later. Larger bath sheets work especially well here.

For sauna & gym

A linen towel for gym and sauna handles repeated wet-dry-wet cycles without smelling. The naturally antibacterial fiber resists bacteria that quickly take over cotton in damp gym bags.

As a hair towel

Gentler on hair than terry cotton — no rough fibers to break strands. The waffle texture absorbs water without the friction that causes frizz. Hand towels and washcloths both work well here.

For backpacking

A compact towel for backpacking that doesn’t need synthetic fibers. Natural linen, fully compostable at end of life, and lighter than most microfiber alternatives.

As a minimalist bathroom towel

The minimalist linen bathroom towel: undyed, simple weave, lasts decades. Replaces a cotton stack with two or three linen pieces that do the job better.

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