this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2024
848 points (97.1% liked)
People Twitter
5234 readers
482 users here now
People tweeting stuff. We allow tweets from anyone.
RULES:
- Mark NSFW content.
- No doxxing people.
- Must be a tweet or similar
- No bullying or international politcs
- Be excellent to each other.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Thank you for the clarification!
Perhaps it's regional? Or even generational? I'm pretty sure I've never heard anyone say "duvet" in real life. I've heard "comforter" many times in real life. The item described has never included a (removable, anyway; I inferred that from your descriptions) cover.
I did once accidentally buy a duvet cover on Amazon after learning the term "duvet" on Reddit and was very disappointed to learn that it provided no warming benefits.
ETA: After reading your other comments, I think what is a comforter to me would probably be just a (perhaps thick / heavy) blanket to you.
I think generally a comforter doesn't have a removable duvet, so it would need to be washed on its own, but I've heard duvet + cover called "comforter" quite a bit.
I see a blanket like this:
A comforter like this:
A duvet is this:
And you would wrap the duvet in a cover, with whatever pattern you like. You'd probably have a few duvet covers, but only one duvet for a given bed.
Those are reasonable. Based on your pictures, I would not differentiate between a comforter and duvet; and would use what you describe as a duvet without a cover. I would just wash the item on its own.
Maybe the biggest difference is that comforters come in many colors and patterns, whereas duvets typically only come in white, and you customize the colors and patterns with the duvet cover. Functionally though, a comforter and a duvet are the same things.
That makes sense, but I was previously unaware. Thanks!
Seems like a duvet cover is often called just a duvet in parts of the US, while a duvet is called a comforter.
There's so many types of duvets here in Norway where I live, there's summer duvets, winter duvets, extra warm duvets, light duvets, heavy duvets, lumpy duvets.... Etc
Sounds like it's regional, then. The clarification is appreciated.
It's pretty convenient when it's a bit shy of getting too hot, but a bedsheet would perform the same in those conditions
I can't speak for other duvet covers, but the one I got was essentially just a wrapper for what I would consider a comforter. It had a zipper on one end and was very thin. It wouldn't be impossible to use as a blanket, comforter or duvet, but I don't think that was the intended use.