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Google Reviews
5 | 87% | |
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Easy Peasy - filter arrived on time.
I purchased the Wireless Bluetooth Headband. Frustrating from first use fiddling around with the control panel and the cabled buds inside the band. After just a few uses the control unit wouldn't charge as advertised (inside the band). Troubleshooting suggested removing from the band, did this but still would not charge. Contacted sleep solutions, sent them a short video of the charging error lights. Despite the product being less than 2 months old they sent me a pre-paid consignment note, to send the control panel & charging pad back to them - I was instructed to include a detailed explanation of the problem and of course my contact details. They would investigate and come back to me. I was also to ensure the product was packaged in a manner to prevent damage. What they should have done, given the age of the product is apologise and sent me a replacement. Unit is useless, I'll throw it out.
Quick delivery and great communication. Sound machine works perfectly for my daughters room
Bought online, after 9 days of having no notice about shipping I emailed them and only then they sent the package. It's been two weeks and I still haven't been delivered.
Easy to order quick delivery and very happy with product.
Item deliverd fast
Excellent product, excellent customer service and very fast delivery. I will say, however, that I find the headhand too hot at the moment. This can't really be helped. But if you tend to run hot or get hot flushes, consider this.
We couldn't believe how fast the electric blankets got here from Sydney. Just 3 days by Australia post to Toowoomba. The products have all the features we wanted as well.
Snuggle up in a winter quilt and enjoy a little luxury every night. Winter quilts are typically around 500 gsm or more or a tog weighting of more that 8 togs
Sleep Solutions is NDIS Registered and Approved
Australian winters vary dramatically — from mild coastal Sydney nights around 10°C to sub-zero conditions in alpine regions and inland areas. A good winter quilt needs to match the local climate, not just a generic "winter" label. This guide covers GSM ratings, fill materials, how insulating capacity varies between materials at the same weight, and how to choose between down, wool, and synthetic options.
For the complete guide to quilt types, construction, and warmth ratings across all seasons, see the Australian Quilt Buying Guide.
GSM (grams per square metre) measures fill density. But two quilts with the same GSM can feel very different in warmth — because the fill material determines insulating capacity, not just the weight. A 450 GSM goose down quilt will be significantly warmer than a 450 GSM cotton quilt.
This is the single most important concept in choosing a winter quilt. Different fill materials have very different insulating capacities per gram. Down traps far more air per gram than cotton or polyester, which is why a lightweight down quilt can feel warmer than a much heavier cotton quilt.
What this means in practice:
TOG (Thermal Overall Grade) is a UK/European measure of thermal resistance — how effectively a quilt prevents heat from passing through. Higher TOG = warmer quilt. It is independent of weight, which makes it more accurate than GSM alone for comparing warmth across different materials.
Australia doesn't use a standardised TOG system — most brands use GSM and a warmth rating (e.g., "warmth level 4-5" or "winter weight") instead. Where TOG is listed, it's useful for direct comparison. Where it isn't, use the material + GSM combination as a guide. For the full warmth rating chart, see the Australian Quilt Buying Guide.
Duck Down
Goose DownDownia stocks both duck and goose down quilts — from the Summer Lightweight 30% Duck Down through to the Gold Collection 85% White Goose Down. Snuggledown offers Hungarian White Goose Down quilts for peak luxury. See all feather & down quilts and read customer reviews.
Each fill has different insulating capacity, breathability, and care requirements. Select a material to jump to its details.
Best for: Natural temperature regulation
Wool's crimped fibres trap insulating air. Naturally regulates temperature — warm when cold, releases heat when warm. Moisture-wicking, dust-mite resistant. The most popular natural winter fill in Australia.
Brands: Herington, Wooltara, MiniJumbuk, Tontine, Crestell, Bambi, Sheridan, Renee Taylor
Best for: Maximum warmth with minimum weight
Highest loft-to-weight ratio of any fill. Duck down for value, goose down for premium warmth. Luxurious, cloud-like drape. Down-proof cotton casing prevents leakage.
Brands: Downia (Duck & Goose), Snuggledown (Hungarian Goose), John Cotton, Sheridan
Best for: Budget warmth, easy care, allergies
Machine washable, hypoallergenic, affordable. Requires higher GSM than natural fills for equivalent warmth. Less breathable — can feel hot and clammy for some sleepers.
Brands: Alastairs, Ardor, SleepCare
Best for: Premium warmth, light weight, allergies
Hollow-core fibres provide ~20-30% more insulation per gram than sheep's wool (Soroko et al., 2019). Lighter, naturally hypoallergenic (no lanolin). Bamboo-alpaca blends add breathability.
Brands: Kelly & Windsor, Bambi, Wooltara
Best for: Year-round versatility, moisture management
Available in multiple GSM options (e.g., 300, 500, 730 GSM). Excellent moisture-wicking — keeps the quilt dry and comfortable. Eco-friendly, smooth feel.
Brands: Bambi
Best for: Breathable warmth, easy washing
Natural, hypoallergenic, machine washable. Less insulating per gram than wool or down — better suited to mild winters or as an autumn/spring quilt that layers into winter.
Brands: Downia, Herington, Bambi
One of the most common bedroom conflicts: one partner sleeps warm, the other sleeps cold. Dual-zone (or "his and hers") quilts solve this by using different warmth levels on each side of the same quilt — a warmer fill or higher GSM on one side, and a lighter, cooler fill on the other.
This approach eliminates the nightly tug-of-war over covers and means neither partner compromises on comfort. Browse the full dual warmth quilts range.
Add a blanket, not a heavier quilt. On the coldest winter nights, layering a wool blanket (400-500 GSM) between the sheet and quilt adds significant warmth without replacing the quilt entirely. A wool blanket under a 450 GSM quilt can provide equivalent warmth to a 600+ GSM winter doona — and the blanket is easily removed as temperatures rise in spring. This is more flexible and cost-effective than buying a heavier quilt for a few extreme weeks per year.
Other layering options:
How a quilt is stitched affects warmth distribution. For winter quilts this matters more than for summer:
The Australian Quilt Buying Guide covers construction types in more detail, including channel construction for feather and down quilts.
Answer three questions:
1. How cold does it get? Mild coastal winters → 400-500 GSM wool or down. Cold inland/southern → 500-600 GSM. Alpine/extreme cold → 600+ GSM or layer with a blanket.
2. Light or heavy feel? Light and lofty: down (highest warmth-to-weight ratio). Medium weight with drape: wool or alpaca. Heavier, cocooning feel: high-GSM microfibre.
3. Care requirements? Machine washable: microfibre, some wool (check label). Spot clean / professional: down, most wool. A quilt cover significantly reduces washing frequency for all types.
Winter quilts are available in all standard Australian bed sizes. Dimensions refer to the quilt itself — always check the product page for exact measurements as brands may vary slightly.
| Size | Quilt Dimensions (cm) | Suits These Beds | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single | 140 x 210 | Single mattress (92 x 188) | Children, solo sleepers |
| King Single | 160 x 210 | King single mattress (107 x 203) | Teenagers, taller solo sleepers |
| Double | 180 x 210 | Double mattress (138 x 188) | Couples (compact), guest rooms |
| Queen | 210 x 210 | Queen mattress (153 x 203) | Most couples — Australia's most popular size |
| King | 245 x 210 | King mattress (183 x 203) | Couples wanting generous drape and coverage |
| Super King | 270 x 240 | Super king mattress (204 x 204) | Maximum space, luxury bedrooms |
Browse our complete range of winter quilts and doonas. Not sure which warmth level or fill is right for you? Our Australian-based sleep specialists can help — contact us for personalised recommendations based on your climate and sleep style.
Wool quilts and feather & down quilts in 500–700+ GSM provide the warmest options. Wool is naturally thermoregulating and excellent for cold climates. Goose down offers luxurious warmth with less weight.
For Australian winters, 400–700+ GSM depending on your climate. Milder areas (Sydney, Brisbane): 400–500 GSM is sufficient. Cold regions (Melbourne, Canberra, Tasmania): 500–700+ GSM for maximum warmth.
In Australia, doona and quilt mean the same thing. Winter doonas are simply heavier-weight versions (400+ GSM) designed for cold months, compared to 150–300 GSM for summer.
Goose down is warmer per gram. Goose down clusters are larger, trap more air, and achieve higher fill power — meaning a goose down quilt can be lighter yet warmer than the equivalent duck down quilt. Duck down is still an excellent insulator and is more affordable. Both are available in summer and winter weights
Not in most Australian climates. A quilt warm enough for a 10°C winter night will overheat on a 25°C summer night. The exceptions: air-conditioned homes at a consistent temperature, or mild coastal areas. Most households need a separate summer quilt (100–250 GSM) and winter quilt (450+ GSM). A "four seasons" quilt set (two quilts that clip together) offers the most flexibility.
TOG measures thermal resistance — how effectively a quilt retains heat. GSM measures fill weight. TOG is more useful for comparing warmth across different materials, because it accounts for insulating capacity, not just density. A 10.5+ TOG quilt is winter-weight. Australia doesn't use a standardised TOG system, but where listed, it's a reliable warmth indicator.
A dual-zone quilt provides different warmth on each side. The Kelly & Windsor His and Hers Alpaca Quilt and the Couples Dual-Zone Tencel Quilt both offer this. Alternatively, a four-seasons quilt set (like the Downia Four Seasons) lets each partner use a different weight layer.
Layer a wool blanket (400–500 GSM) between the sheet and quilt. This adds significant insulation without replacing the quilt. An electric blanket can pre-warm the bed before sleep. Switching to flannel or brushed cotton sheets also creates a warmer base layer.