If you had to pick a single factor that separates a truly luxurious sheet from a mediocre one, it wouldn't be thread count. It would be staple length — the length of the individual cotton fibers before they're spun into yarn. Most shoppers never hear about it, but it's the difference between a sheet that gets softer with age and one that pills after a month.
What is "staple length"?
Cotton fiber comes off the plant in strands of varying length. "Staple" is just the word cotton traders use for a single fiber. A staple might be as short as half an inch (around 12mm) or as long as an inch and a half (around 38mm or more), depending on the variety of cotton plant and where it was grown.
Staple length is graded into three broad categories:
| Category | Length | Examples | Used For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-staple | Under 1 inch (< 25mm) | Upland, commodity cotton | T-shirts, denim, budget sheets |
| Long-staple | 1 to 1¼ inches (25–32mm) | Premium American, Turkish, Indian | Luxury sheets, fine shirting |
| Extra-long staple (ELS) | Over 1¼ inches (> 32mm) | Egyptian Giza, Supima®, Sea Island | The finest sheets and shirting |
Why length changes everything
It comes down to physics. Every piece of yarn is made by spinning individual fibers together. When fibers are short, there are lots of exposed ends sticking out of the yarn like the bristles on a brush. Those ends are what cause pilling (they catch, break, and roll into little balls), coarseness (they scratch against your skin), and weakness (every fiber end is a potential failure point).
When fibers are long, fewer ends stick out per inch of yarn. The result is:
- Smoother surface — fewer stray ends to create roughness
- Less pilling — fewer ends to catch and roll
- Stronger yarn — long fibers twist around each other with more grip
- Softer hand — less friction against skin
- Longer life — fewer weak points means fewer holes and tears over time
This is why a 300 TC sheet in long-staple cotton will feel better, last longer, and look cleaner after 100 washes than a 1000 TC sheet in short-staple cotton. The fiber matters more than the count.
The most famous long-staple cottons
Egyptian Giza
Grown in the Nile Delta of Egypt, Giza cotton is the most famous ELS cotton in the world. The hot days, cool nights, and rich river silt of the Nile region produce unusually long, fine, strong fibers. Giza 45 is the rarest grade, reserved for the world's most expensive sheets and shirts. Giza 86 and 87 are more common in luxury goods.
Supima®
Short for "Superior Pima," Supima® is American extra-long staple cotton grown primarily in California and Arizona. It's genetically descended from Sea Island cotton and managed by a cooperative that enforces strict quality standards. Only about 3% of the cotton grown in the U.S. qualifies as Supima®. It's a common choice for American luxury sheeting.
Pima
Pima is the broader name for American ELS cotton. "Pima" without the Supima® trademark can come from anywhere and vary in quality — Supima® is the quality-controlled subset.
Turkish long-staple
Aegean Turkey produces excellent long-staple cotton, particularly around Izmir. It's the backbone of Turkey's famous towel industry and increasingly of its sheeting as well.
Indian long-staple
India is the world's largest cotton grower and produces long-staple varieties from Gujarat, Maharashtra, and the Deccan plateau. Premium Indian long-staple, when grown and ginned carefully, rivals any cotton in the world — and it's what luxury hotel manufacturers have used for decades to supply the world's best hotels.
How we use long-staple cotton
Dove & Thread sources long-staple cotton for the entire range — sheets, pillowslips, duvet covers, and towels. We don't cut corners here because we can't: we built our reputation making bedding for luxury hotels, and those hotels send products back if the fiber quality drops for a single shipment. That discipline is baked into everything we produce for home.
The difference isn't something you notice on the first night so much as on the hundredth. Long-staple cotton gets softer with every wash without breaking down. Short-staple cotton feels fine at first and then starts to pill, thin, and fail. You're buying a life span, not just a first impression.
After ten washes, check the surface. If you see little fabric balls (pills), especially along seams and friction points, you're probably looking at short-staple cotton. Long-staple cotton stays smooth.
Staple length vs thread count vs weave
These three factors — staple length, thread count, and weave — work together. Long-staple cotton gives you the fiber quality. Thread count tells you how densely it's woven. Weave (percale or sateen) determines how it feels. A great sheet has all three working in balance. You can have a high thread count with short-staple cotton (often) and get a bad sheet. You can have a modest thread count with long-staple cotton and get a great one. The combination matters more than any single number.
Read our guides on thread count and percale vs sateen to understand how all three factors fit together when choosing sheets.
