Description
The Christian Fischbacher Eternity bed linen set is a masterpiece of Swiss satin craftsmanship. Its graceful pearl white ground is adorned with a delicate, tone-on-tone leaf and floral jacquard pattern that catches the light beautifully, bringing quiet luxury to your bedroom.
What sets this satin apart is the exclusive use of extra-long staple Pima cotton yarn of the highest quality, woven using the renowned Swiss Construction technique. The combination of this fine yarn, the specialised weaving method, and expert finishing gives the fabric its signature elegant sheen. At just 100g per m², it is noticeably softer and lighter than conventional bedding satins.
The zip closure keeps your duvet perfectly in place, while the OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certification guarantees the fabric is free from harmful substances.
Set includes:
- Duvet cover: 240 × 220 cm
- 2 Pillowcases: 50 × 70 cm
Product details:
- Composition: 100% Cotton (Satin)
- Color: Pearl White (305)
- Pattern: Eternity — tone-on-tone leaf & floral jacquard
- Cotton type: Extra-long staple Pima cotton
- Weave: Swiss Construction
- Weight: 100g/m²
- Closure: Zip
- Wash temperature: up to 60°C
- Certification: OEKO-TEX Standard 100
- Brand: Christian Fischbacher, St. Gallen, Switzerland — Est. 1819
FAQ
What is “pearl white” and how does it differ from pure white as a base colour for printed bed linen?
Pearl white is a warm-toned, slightly off-white — it has a subtle ivory or cream undertone rather than the cool, blue-leaning brightness of optical white. On a satin base this distinction is meaningful: pure white satin can read as clinical or harsh under certain lighting conditions, particularly artificial light in the evening. Pearl white has a softer luminosity that feels warm and restful — the satin’s natural sheen gives it a gentle depth that pure white lacks. As a ground for a botanical floral print, it also serves the design better: the pale pastel tones of the wildflower motif read more naturally against a warm background than they would against stark white, where the contrast would feel sharp rather than airy.
How does a scattered botanical motif work differently in a bedroom compared to an all-over dense pattern?
The Eternity’s composition places individual wildflower clusters across an open ground rather than covering the surface continuously — a considered design choice that has a specific effect in a bedroom environment. A dense all-over pattern fills the visual field completely, which can feel busy or stimulating when you are looking at it from the pillow. A scattered motif, by contrast, creates breathing space between the elements: your eye moves through the design and finds rest in the plain ground between the flowers. The result feels decorative without being demanding — you are aware of the pattern’s beauty without it competing for attention. This is also why botanical scattered prints have endured as a premium bed linen motif for centuries, long outlasting more fashion-driven pattern trends.
Does a pastel floral print on satin require any special care to preserve its colours over time?
Pastel tones on a satin ground are more vulnerable to care errors than deep saturated colours, precisely because any fading is immediately noticeable against such a pale background. Wash at 30–40°C maximum, always with the cover turned inside out, and use a gentle detergent without bleaching agents or optical brighteners — the latter are formulated to enhance white fabrics and will shift the pearl white ground toward a cooler, bluer tone over time. Avoid prolonged sun exposure during drying, which can bleach pastel pigments unevenly. Pima cotton’s long-staple fibre structure holds reactive dyes more securely than short-staple alternatives from the outset — Christian Fischbacher’s Swiss colorfastness standards ensure the print is stable — but consistent care is what maintains that stability across years of regular washing.
At 2,685₾ for a single fixed price, how should I think about the value of the Eternity set?
Unlike the variable-priced sets in the range where size drives the price difference, the Eternity is offered at one price point — the 240×220cm format, which is the larger of the two standard European sizes and the one suited to beds from 180cm width upward. That single size decision simplifies the purchase but also means you are buying the more generous cut regardless. Within that, the value equation rests on three converging factors: Pima cotton satin as the base fabric, Swiss construction applied to a technically demanding reactive print, and a design that sits outside seasonal trends. Botanical florals in muted pastels on a warm white ground are one of the most enduring motifs in European fine textile design — this is not a set you will want to replace because it has dated. At Sleep Gallery’s showroom on Abashidze Street in Vake, you can see the Eternity alongside other sets in the collection and assess in person how the print and the satin ground interact in natural light — something that product photography consistently underrepresents. Free delivery across Tbilisi included.









