A note on cotton, comfort, and what your skin already knew
The fabric your body has been asking for all along.
A quiet read on why breathable cotton matters when you sleep, when you sweat, and when your skin would rather not be wrapped in plastic. Plus the set we built for it.
— 01 / The Premise
Most women own underwear that does not let their skin breathe.
am going to write this the way I would say it to a friend across a kitchen table, because there is no version of this where corporate softens it into something useful.
Most everyday underwear sold today is polyester, nylon, or some blend wrapped in lace. These fabrics look fine on a hanger. They photograph well. They are also, by design, not very breathable. They trap heat. They hold moisture. They do this for eight hours a night, every night, and we are then surprised when our bodies complain.
Cotton is different, and the reason it is different is not a marketing claim. It is the structure of the fibre. Cotton is a natural cellulose. It absorbs moisture into the fibre itself rather than holding it on the surface. It allows air to move through. That is, in plain terms, why your grandmother told you to wear cotton.
What follows is a short read on why that matters more than the underwear industry would like you to know, what the actual public health guidance says, and what we built to put it on your body.
— 02 / Twelve Things Worth Knowing
What cotton actually does that synthetic fabrics do not.
None of these are pulled out of thin air. They are the working principles gynecologists, dermatologists, and public health bodies have been quietly repeating for decades, while the lingerie aisle filled up with everything except cotton.
Breathable cotton helps reduce moisture buildup overnight.
Less trapped moisture against intimate skin can support a less hospitable environment for irritation and yeast overgrowth. This is the entire reason cotton became the default recommendation in the first place.
The CDC actually says this out loud.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists wearing cotton underwear and avoiding tight, non-breathable clothing among the ways to help reduce the risk of vaginal yeast infections. Public health guidance, not a brand claim.
Cotton breathes more than polyester or nylon.
The cellulose structure of cotton allows airflow through the fabric itself. Most synthetic fibres are essentially fine plastics. They do many things well. Letting your skin breathe overnight is not one of them.
Heat plus moisture is the issue, not heat alone.
It is the combination of trapped warmth and trapped damp that creates a more favourable environment for yeast and bacteria to multiply. Cotton interrupts both halves of that equation. Synthetics often hold both.
Gynecologists recommend cotton for sensitive bodies.
For women prone to recurring irritation, sensitivity, or infections, high-quality cotton underwear is among the most consistent recommendations made by women's health practitioners. Not a fad. A standing recommendation.
Tight synthetic underwear can mean more sweat and friction.
Two of the most common drivers of skin irritation in the intimate area. Loose, breathable cotton avoids both at once. Your skin spends 8 hours a night with this fabric. It is worth getting right.
Cotton absorbs moisture instead of holding it on the skin.
This is a small physical detail with a real-world consequence. The skin stays drier. Drier skin overnight tends to feel calmer in the morning. You did not imagine that.
Sensitive skin tends to prefer natural fibres.
Lace, synthetic blends, and decorative seams can chafe against thinner, more reactive skin. Soft cotton tends to reduce the friction and itching that women with sensitive skin live with quietly.
Loose cotton at night supports better ventilation.
Some practitioners go further and suggest sleeping without underwear at all. If that is not your preference, loose breathable cotton is the next best thing. Tight synthetic is the worst of both worlds.
Breathability matters most when you need it most.
After a workout. On a hot day. After hours in tight jeans. These are the moments when moisture retention spikes. These are also the moments when what you sleep in matters more than usual.
Synthetic fabrics have their place. It is not overnight.
Polyester and elastane blends are excellent for sportswear, swimwear, shapewear. For overnight intimate comfort, cotton is the safer everyday default. Use the right fabric for the right job.
Better airflow can reduce odour, not just discomfort.
Odour from intimate areas is most often a downstream effect of trapped moisture, not poor hygiene. Better airflow means less retained moisture, which means less of the smell that nobody wants to discuss.
An honest note on what cotton can and cannot do
The CDC specifically recommends cotton underwear in the context of helping reduce risk factors for vaginal yeast infections and irritation. It is not a guaranteed prevention method, and it is not a medical treatment. Cotton supports a healthier environment for intimate skin. It does not replace medical care, and it does not cure infections.
Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Preventing Candidiasis." If you have recurring symptoms, please speak to your doctor.
"I got tired of choosing between lingerie made for the male gaze and underwear so cheap and boring it felt disposable. We deserve the third option."
Anna Khoma · Founder, epoché
— 03 / The Comparison Nobody Runs
Two pieces of fabric. Eight hours of sleep. Very different mornings.
Imagine the same woman, same bed, same week. The variable is the fabric touching her skin overnight. This is what changes.
The Synthetic Blend
Polyester, nylon, lace overlays.
- ✕ Traps body heat against the skin for hours
- ✕ Holds moisture on the surface rather than absorbing it
- ✕ Limited airflow through the fibre structure
- ✕ Tight elastic and decorative seams add friction
- ✕ The environment yeast and bacteria prefer
- ✕ You wake up. Your skin does not feel rested.
90% Cotton, 10% Spandex
What we put in the Slow Morning Set.
- — Cellulose structure allows air to move through the fabric
- — Absorbs moisture into the fibre, away from the skin
- — Soft against sensitive skin, no lace edge cutting in
- — Mid-rise elastic that sits flat, no digging
- — The environment public health bodies recommend
- — You wake up. Your skin is calm. That is the brief.
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— 04 / Our Answer to the Brief
The Slow Morning Set.
Shorts for the days when comfort is the only thing that matters. Mid-rise with an elastic waistband that sits flat. Not too tight, not too loose. A wireless bra top that holds you without performing for anyone. Designed to live next to your skin overnight without a single thing to apologise for.
| Material | 90% cotton, 10% spandex. Soft, breathable, perfect stretch. |
| Fit | True to size. Relaxed but supportive. Wireless bra top, shorts at natural waist. |
| Sizes | S, M, L, XL |
| Colours | Gray, Creamy, Black, Chocolate |
| Care | Machine wash cold. Tumble dry low or hang to dry. |
— What you get in one set
1
Wireless bra top
Soft cotton cup, no underwire theatrics. Stays where you put it.
3
Cotton shorts
Mid-rise, flat elastic waist. The right amount of coverage and stretch.
- Free shipping over $80
- Free 30-day returns
- Doesn't fit, send it back
— 05 / The Honest Q&A
The questions women actually ask before they buy.
I have been asked all of these. I am answering them the way I would over coffee, not the way a marketing team would write them.
No fabric prevents yeast infections on its own, and any brand telling you otherwise is overselling. What cotton does is help reduce the risk factors. The CDC recommends it for that reason. If you have recurring symptoms, please see a doctor first. Cotton is a daily habit, not a treatment.
You are paying for one bra plus three shorts, which is $26.25 per piece. The cotton is heavier and stays soft after washing. The elastic does not roll. The seams do not chafe. You can pay $20 elsewhere. You will replace it twice as often. The math, if you do it honestly, lands on us.
You have 30 days to send it back, free, with the hygienic sticker intact. Try it on over your own underwear. If it doesn't sit right on your body, return it. We would rather have an honest fit than a forced sale.
Both, honestly. We designed it for slow mornings, which is why it is called what it is called. But the same properties that make it good overnight — breathability, soft elastic, no decorative friction — also make it the set most of our customers wear on travel days, sick days, and the kind of Sunday where the goal is simply to be left alone.
Pure 100% cotton has no recovery. It bags out at the knees of the shorts and the band of the bra after a few wears. The 10% spandex is what holds the shape so the set still fits like new on wear 50. It is the smallest amount of stretch we could engineer in, and we tested several blends before landing here.
What real customers say
4.89 stars across
274 verified reviews
— 06 / The Decision
Your skin spends one third of your life with this fabric.
Make it cotton. Make it breathable. Make it the kind of thing you forget you are wearing, which is the entire point.
Get the Slow Morning Set — $105 →