Description
The Christian Fischbacher Luxury Nights – E38 Summerfield bed linen set is a refined tribute to the beauty of a summer meadow. Part of the exclusive Luxury Nights collection — Elegant · Sophisticated · Precious — its crisp white ground (010) is graced with a delicate cornflower motif in vivid blue and green, embroidered with artisanal precision that brings a fresh, botanical elegance to any bedroom.
Like all Christian Fischbacher satins, this set is made exclusively from 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, draping effortlessly and feeling weightless against the skin.
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:
- 1 Duvet cover: 200 × 220 cm
- 2 Pillowcases: 50 × 70 cm
Product details:
- Composition: 100% Cotton (Satin)
- Color: White with cornflower motif (010)
- Pattern: Summerfield — delicate cornflower embroidery
- 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
- Collection: Luxury Nights — Elegant · Sophisticated · Precious
- Brand: Christian Fischbacher, St. Gallen, Switzerland — Est. 1819
FAQ
What is cornflower embroidery on satin, and how is it different from a printed pattern?
Embroidery and print are fundamentally different processes that produce entirely different results on the fabric surface. A printed pattern is applied on top of the weave — ink or dye is transferred onto the finished cloth, sitting on the surface rather than being part of it. Embroidery is stitched directly into the fabric thread by thread, creating a motif that is structurally part of the textile itself. On a satin base, this contrast is especially striking: the matte embroidery thread sits against the lustrous woven background, giving the cornflower motif a subtle three-dimensional quality that changes in different lighting conditions. It also means the pattern cannot crack, peel, or fade independently of the fabric — it ages exactly as the base cloth does.
Why does premium bed linen use a zip closure rather than buttons or ties?
Buttons and ties are traditional but practically imperfect — buttons can snag on the duvet insert, pull at the fabric around the buttonhole over time, and come undone during the night. Ties require precise alignment and can loosen under movement. A zip closure along the full width of the duvet cover keeps the insert firmly in place regardless of how much you move during sleep, eliminates any gap through which the insert can bunch or escape, and distributes stress evenly across the opening rather than concentrating it at button points. On a satin cover where the fabric surface is fine and the construction is precise, a quality zip is also simply more appropriate — it maintains the clean, uninterrupted lines of the design.
At 3,521₾ for a set, what am I actually paying for compared to a mass-market bed linen set at a fraction of the price?
It helps to think about what the price includes: a 200×220cm duvet cover plus two pillowcases, all in Pima cotton satin with hand-guided cornflower embroidery, produced in Switzerland. Broken into components, a duvet cover of this construction alone would cost considerably more from many heritage European linen houses. But beyond the materials, you are paying for embroidery that was designed and placed by Christian Fischbacher’s in-house studio — a motif that has been considered as a complete composition across the set, not a repeating tile stamped at scale. Mass-market embroidered linen typically uses automated pattern repeats on short-staple cotton; the embroidery thread pulls, the base fabric pills, and within two years the set looks tired. This set is designed to still look considered and feel exceptional a decade from now.
Is this bed linen set suitable as a gift, and can I view it before purchasing at Sleep Gallery?
The Summerfield set is one of the most gift-appropriate pieces in the Christian Fischbacher collection — the floral embroidery and complete set format make it a considered, substantial present for a housewarming, wedding, or significant occasion, and Christian Fischbacher’s packaging reflects that positioning. At Sleep Gallery’s showroom at 24 Irakli Abashidze Street in Vake, Tbilisi, you can see the embroidery detail and handle the satin in person before committing — particularly important for a set at this price point, where the tactile quality is a core part of what you’re purchasing. Our consultants can also advise on coordinating fitted sheets and pillowcases to complete the bedroom. Reach us at 596 14 9977 or visit us in-store.










