Boho Bedding
We give 20% of profits to bird conservation and inclusive birding efforts.
What makes boho bedding work
Boho bedding leans into pattern, color, and layering instead of trying to coordinate everything to a single palette. The BWB boho collection runs heavy on peacocks, herons, hummingbirds, jewel-toned florals, and large-scale botanicals that look intentional even when mixed with stripes, solids, or a second print on the bed. The rule of thumb: pick one large-scale hero pattern for the duvet, then let shams and throws play in the same color family without matching exactly.
How to style boho bedding
- Anchor with a hero print. A peacock or heron duvet cover in saturated teals, rust, or plum sets the room's mood. Keep the wall behind the bed quieter so the bedding can lead.
- Mix scales, not chaos. Pair a large-scale duvet with smaller-scale floral shams and a solid or near-solid sheet set. Three pattern scales is the sweet spot.
- Layer textures. Linen duvet, cotton sateen shams, and a velvet or minky throw blanket from the catalog read as collected rather than coordinated.
- Bring in plants and brass. Boho rooms reward warm metals, real plants, and woven textures on the floor. The bedding can be the loudest thing in the room.
FAQ
What substrates work best for boho bedding?
Linen and cotton sateen both photograph well in saturated boho prints. Linen reads relaxed; sateen reads richer and slightly luxurious.
Who prints and ships these?
Spoonflower prints each piece on demand in North Carolina and ships directly. Production runs about a week before shipping.
Can I get matching curtains, pillows, or throws?
Most boho prints run across multiple surfaces. Search the design name to find matching curtains, pillows, throws, and table linens.
Can I order a swatch first?
Yes. Spoonflower swatches are the safest way to confirm color and hand before ordering a full duvet, especially in saturated boho palettes.








