Start here
Is Satin Good for Hair? What It Helps, What It Doesn't, and Why Silk Still Wins
Satin is a smooth, low-friction upgrade from cotton for frizz and breakage. But satin is a weave, not a fibre, which is why silk usually wins overall. Here is how they compare.
Why Is My Hair So Staticky? Causes, Quick Fixes and the Silk Pillowcase Swap That Helps
Static hair is a dryness-and-friction problem. Here are the real causes, the fastest fixes for flyaways, and how a smoother pillowcase helps reduce overnight friction.
7 Signs Your Hair Is Healthy (and What to Do If It Isn't)
Wondering if your hair is actually healthy? Here are 7 evidence-backed signs to check, plus what causes damage and how to protect your hair overnight.
Set Of 2 | 22 Momme 100% Mulberry Silk Pillowcases for Hair & Skin - White
100% Grade 6A Mulberry Silk · OEKO-TEX Certified · Set of 2
7 Signs Your Hair Is Healthy (and What to Do If It Isn't)
Wondering if your hair is actually healthy? Here are 7 evidence-backed signs to check, plus what causes damage and how to protect your hair overnight.
Can a Silk Pillowcase for Lash Extensions Actually Reduce Lash Fallout Overnight?
if you're sleeping on cotton, your pillow may be the reason your lash retention isn't lasting as long as it should
Back of Head Itches at Night? 6 Common Causes & How to Stop It
Your body temperature rises slightly during the evening, which increases blood flow to the scalp and can amplify the sensation of itch
Wake up with the same hair you went to sleep with.
Cotton creates friction. Friction creates frizz, breakage, and split ends. A 22 momme mulberry silk pillowcase removes that source of nightly damage, and you notice the difference within a week.
60-night guarantee · Free UK shipping over £49
Frequently asked questions
Does a silk pillowcase actually reduce frizz, or is that a marketing story?
It reduces frizz in one specific, measurable way: it produces significantly less friction than cotton. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends silk or satin pillowcases for curly and textured hair precisely because smoother surfaces cause less mechanical disruption overnight. Frizz caused by friction, which is most of it, is genuinely reduced. The marketing tends to oversell this into anti-ageing miracle territory, which is where the healthy scepticism usually lands. Stick to the friction claim and it holds up.
Will sleeping on silk actually stop hair breakage?
Breakage caused by friction against a rough surface overnight? Yes, a silk pillowcase can genuinely help with that. Breakage caused by heat damage, chemical processing, or a diet that would concern a nutritionist? No pillow thread count fixes those. A silk pillowcase removes one significant source of repeated mechanical stress from your hair. That is a real benefit. It is not a repair treatment, and anyone selling it as one is getting ahead of the evidence.
Is silk better for hair than satin?
They are not the same category of thing, which is the source of most of the confusion. Silk is a fibre. Satin is a weave structure that can be made from polyester, nylon, or silk. A polyester satin pillowcase will reduce friction compared to cotton, which is why it helps with frizz and breakage. A mulberry silk pillowcase does all of that and is also breathable, temperature-regulating, and made from a natural protein fibre that does not trap heat. If you are choosing between polyester satin and nothing, satin still helps. If you are choosing between the two, silk wins on every metric that matters.
Do I need a silk bonnet if I already have a silk pillowcase?
Not necessarily, but it depends entirely on how much you move in your sleep. A silk pillowcase protects your hair as long as your hair is on the pillow. A silk bonnet protects your hair regardless of where your head ends up at 3am. Side sleepers and relatively still sleepers tend to do well with just a pillowcase. Active sleepers who regularly wake up facing the opposite direction with their pillow on the floor may do better with a bonnet. Use what you will actually wear. The best option is the one that stays on your head.
How long does it take to notice a difference?
Most people notice less frizz within the first week, particularly in the morning when overnight friction is most obvious. Reduction in breakage takes longer, because hair grows slowly and damage accumulates over months rather than days. A useful way to think about it: the pillowcase is removing a daily stressor, not reversing existing damage. You will notice the absence of the bad thing before you notice an improvement in the overall condition of your hair. Be patient with the second part.
Is cotton really that bad for hair?
Cotton is not bad, exactly. It is just not designed with your hair in mind. Cotton fibres create more friction than silk because of their structure, they absorb moisture including the moisture your hair actually needs, and they can snag and catch strands as you move during the night. None of this is catastrophic in isolation. But it adds up across seven or eight hours, every single night, for years. The question is less "is cotton destroying my hair" and more "why would you choose the rougher, more absorbent option when a better one exists."
Does sleeping on silk help hair grow?
Silk does not stimulate hair growth. That claim is not supported by the evidence, and you should be suspicious of anyone selling it on that basis. What silk can do is reduce breakage caused by overnight friction, which means the hair you are already growing is more likely to stay on your head rather than ending up on your pillowcase. Length retention is not the same as accelerated growth, but the effect when you look in the mirror is similar. It is a meaningful difference, just not the one the headline usually promises.
Which hair types benefit most from a silk pillowcase?
Curly, coily, and textured hair sees the most obvious improvement because these types are most vulnerable to friction and overnight moisture loss. Fine hair benefits significantly because it is prone to breakage from even minor mechanical stress. Colour-treated and heat-damaged hair benefits because the cuticle is already compromised and does not need additional stress added to it overnight. Thick, straight, healthy hair benefits the least, though it still benefits. The rule is roughly: the more fragile your hair, the more noticeable the difference.
Sleep on silk. Wake up with better hair.
100% Grade 6A Mulberry Silk, OEKO-TEX certified, in 22 and 30 momme weights. Everything you've read about, in one place.
Shop the collection →60-night guarantee · Free UK shipping over £49