Luxury Bedspreads, Boutis & Quilted Comforters for the Mediterranean Climate

Transform your bedroom with our exquisite collection of bedspreads and 'Boutis'—the perfect bedding solution for the Spanish climate. At Yorkshire Linen Beds & More, we understand that a heavy duvet isn't always the right choice for a Mediterranean night. Our bedspread collection is curated to provide the perfect balance of style, comfort, and temperature regulation, ensuring your bed looks professionally dressed while keeping you comfortable all year round.

Versatile Style for Every Home

From the traditional elegance of Spanish-style quilted Boutis to contemporary, lightweight jacquard bedspreads, our range offers a diverse array of textures and patterns. These pieces are designed to be the focal point of your decor, providing a polished 'hotel-style' finish to any bedroom. Whether you are looking for a vibrant Mediterranean print to brighten a guest room or a sophisticated neutral tone for a master suite, our bedspreads add a layer of luxury that is both functional and beautiful.

The Practical Choice for Spain

In the height of the Andalusian summer, a lightweight bedspread used with just a flat sheet is the gold standard for a cool night's sleep. During the cooler winter months, they act as an extra layer of insulation over your duvet, providing that cosy, weighted feeling without the bulk. Our bedspreads are selected for their durability and ease of care, making them an ideal choice for busy family homes and high-turnover holiday rentals alike. Explore our range of sizes—from Single to Superking—and discover why a quality bedspread is the most versatile investment you can make for your Spanish home.

Collection: Bedspreads & Runners

Beautiful bedspreads & Runners from Yorkshire Linen Beds & More. Traditional or contemporary looks, our collection of bedspread designs create a comfortable, welcoming bedroom atmosphere! 

Bedspreads from Yorkshire Linen Beds & More

Bedspreads have long held a place in 'shabby-chic' design schemes, but now the beloved bedspread in a variety of other styles as well, suiting almost any home.

Bedspread & Runners from Yorkshire Linen Beds & More

Bedspreads & Runners, Yorkshire Linen Beds & More

All-Season Bedding: Using Bedspreads Throughout the Year

Summer: The 'Sheet and Spread' Method

During July and August in Spain, even a 1.5 tog duvet can feel like too much. The most popular way to sleep comfortably is the 'Sheet and Spread' method. Use a high-quality 100% cotton flat sheet against your skin, and layer a lightweight bedspread over the top. This provides the security of a cover without the insulation of a duvet, allowing air to circulate freely.

Autumn/Spring: The Perfect Mid-Season Solution

As the temperature begins to dip in the evenings, the bedspread provides that perfect middle ground. It keeps the chill off without the need to 'switch' to your heavy winter bedding too early.

Winter: Insulation and Weight

In the winter, your bedspread shouldn't go into storage. Layering it over your duvet adds an extra thermal barrier, trapping the heat generated by your body. Furthermore, the extra weight of a quilted bedspread can actually improve sleep quality by providing a 'grounding' effect, similar to a weighted blanket.

Visit our showrooms in Mijas to see our bedspreads in person. Our team can help you choose the right weight and size for your specific bed, ensuring you stay comfortable no matter what the Spanish weather brings.

How to Size and Style Your Bedspread for a Professional Finish

Choosing the Right Size for the 'Drop'

Unlike a duvet, which only needs to cover the top of the mattress, a bedspread is designed to 'drop' down the sides of the bed, often hiding the bed base or frame. To get that luxurious, draped look, you need to consider the height of your bed.

  • Standard Look: Look for a bedspread that hangs roughly 30-40cm over each side.
  • The 'Grand' Look: If you want the bedspread to nearly touch the floor, measure from the top of your mattress to the floor and add that to your width.

Layering Like a Designer

For a 5-star hotel appearance, we recommend the 'Double Layer' technique. Use a plain-dye duvet cover as your base, and then fold your bedspread across the bottom third of the bed. This adds physical depth and allows you to play with contrasting textures—for example, a smooth cotton duvet paired with a heavily textured jacquard bedspread.

Don't Forget the Shams

Many of our bedspreads and Boutis come as 'sets' including matching pillow shams. These are larger than standard pillowcases and are meant to be propped up against the headboard. This creates a vertical layer of colour that ties the whole bed together, making the room feel more intentional and designed.

What is a Bedspread? Understanding the Difference Between Bedspreads, Quilts & Throws

The terminology around bed coverings is one of those areas where casual usage and technical precision diverge considerably, and where the same word can mean quite different things depending on who is using it and where they are shopping. Bedspread, quilt, coverlet, comforter, throw — these terms are frequently used interchangeably in everyday conversation, but they describe products with meaningfully different characteristics, and understanding the distinctions helps enormously when you're trying to decide what you actually need for a specific bedroom and a specific purpose.

A bedspread, in its traditional and most precise sense, is a decorative top cover designed to cover the entire bed from head to foot, typically draping down over the sides and reaching close to the floor at the foot of the bed. It sits on top of all the other bedding — sheets, duvet or blanket — and its primary purpose is aesthetic: it gives the bed a finished, pulled-together appearance during the day when the room is in use as a living space rather than a sleeping space. A well-chosen bedspread transforms the visual character of a bedroom in a way that a duvet cover alone rarely achieves, because it creates a smooth, continuous surface across the bed and a controlled drape at the sides and foot that reads as considered and intentional.

A quilt is technically a specific type of bedspread — one in which two layers of fabric are stitched together with a layer of padding between them, the stitching creating the characteristic quilted pattern visible on the surface. Traditional quilts are made from patchwork fabric panels and are associated with a warm, domestic, artisanal aesthetic; contemporary quilts are more likely to use single-fabric panels with geometric or textural stitching, but the defining characteristic — the sandwiched construction — remains the same. Quilts offer more warmth than lightweight bedspreads because of the padding layer, which makes them particularly useful in transitional seasons when a full duvet is too warm but bare sheets are not enough.

A coverlet is a lighter, shorter alternative to a full bedspread — typically reaching only to the top of the bed valance or the mattress edge rather than draping to the floor. Coverlets are popular in contemporary interior design because their more restrained proportions suit modern, low-profile bed frames and minimalist room schemes well.

A throw is a smaller, less structured covering — typically used at the foot of the bed as a decorative and functional accent rather than as a full bed covering. Throws are the most versatile category, doubling easily between bedroom and living room use, and are particularly popular for adding a layer of colour, texture, or warmth to an otherwise finished bed without the visual weight of a full bedspread.

A bed runner — the other product type in this Yorkshire Linen collection alongside full bedspreads — is a horizontal strip of fabric, typically 45–50cm deep, that lies across the foot of the bed. It is a staple of hotel-style bedroom dressing, where it adds a refined decorative accent and a practical barrier between the feet of sitting or resting guests and the main bedding. In a domestic setting, a bed runner is the simplest and most cost-effective way to introduce a hotel-quality finishing touch to a bedroom scheme — and the collection at Yorkshire Linen includes several options that suit this purpose beautifully.

Bedspread vs duvet cover — when to choose which

The bedspread and the duvet cover serve overlapping but distinct purposes, and many households benefit from having both. A duvet cover is primarily functional — it protects the duvet, provides the sleeping surface, and dresses the bed during the day. A bedspread goes over the top of the dressed bed to create a more formal, more finished appearance — particularly useful in guest bedrooms, rental properties, and any room where the visual presentation of the bed is a priority. The two work together to provide both the practicality of a covered duvet and the polished appearance of a fully dressed bed, without either compromising the other.

In warmer climates — and the Costa del Sol is very much a warmer climate for much of the year — a bedspread can also serve as the primary top covering in its own right, laid directly over sheets in the summer months when a duvet is simply too warm. The lightweight options in the collection, including the Edna range and the thinner decorative bedspreads, are ideal for this purpose.

What is a 'Bouti'? Understanding Mediterranean Bedding

The Classic Spanish Bouti: Lightweight Luxury Explained.

A Mediterranean Staple

If you have spent time in Spanish homes or boutique hotels, you have likely encountered the 'Bouti.' A Bouti is a traditional Mediterranean-style bedspread that is lightly quilted. It sits somewhere between a thin summer coverlet and a heavy winter comforter. The word comes from the French 'boutis,' referring to the stitching technique used to create raised patterns.

Why Boutis are Perfect for the Costa del Sol

The beauty of a Bouti lies in its weight. They are specifically designed for warmer climates where you want the aesthetic of a quilted bed but without the heat-trapping properties of a thick duvet. They provide just enough weight to feel comforting but are breathable enough to prevent overheating.

Style and Durability

Most Boutis feature intricate heat-pressed or stitched patterns, giving them a rich, textured appearance that resists wrinkling. This makes them a favourite for property managers; you can pull a Bouti straight from the cupboard, throw it over the bed, and it looks pristine instantly—no ironing required. They are typically machine washable and dry much faster than standard comforters, making them the ultimate 'low-maintenance, high-impact' bedding choice.

Bedspread Styles & Textures — Navigating the Range from Lightweight to Luxury

The bedspreads and runners collection at Yorkshire Linen Beds & More is one of the broadest and most varied sections of the range — spanning price points from under €15 to nearly €160, fabric types from lightweight polyester to 100% stonewashed cotton, and aesthetics from quietly contemporary neutrals to richly textured jacquard designs. This section maps the range to help identify the right product for a specific need, budget, and bedroom aesthetic.

Entry level — lightweight and versatile

At the accessible end of the range, the Edna lightweight bedspread in stone, white, and silver offers an affordable and practical way to dress a bed with a clean, coordinated appearance. Lightweight and easy to launder, these are particularly well suited to secondary bedrooms, holiday properties, and any situation where the bedspread will see regular use and needs to handle frequent washing without special treatment. At under €15 for smaller sizes, the Edna range also makes it easy to change the look of a bedroom seasonally without a significant investment.

The Elliott Jacquard bedspread in beige and aqua sits at a similar accessible price point but introduces a woven jacquard texture — a raised, patterned surface created by the weave itself rather than applied as a print — that adds considerably more visual interest. Jacquard fabric has a quality of depth and dimensionality that flat printed fabric cannot replicate, and at the Elliott's price point it represents excellent value for a textured product.

Mid range — texture, character and cotton

The mid-range of the collection is where the most interesting fabric stories are told. The stonewashed waffle 100% cotton bedspreads in stone are a particularly strong option: waffle weave is a textured cotton construction with a characteristic grid-like surface that combines excellent breathability with a tactile, artisanal quality that suits relaxed, natural-material interiors particularly well. The stonewash finish — in which the fabric is processed after weaving to create a softened, gently worn appearance — adds warmth and character, and the 100% cotton construction means the bedspread improves with washing and use rather than deteriorating.

The Maya seersucker style bedspread in beige and mint brings the puckered seersucker texture to the bedspread category — a light, crinkled surface that is casual, fresh, and perfectly suited to the Mediterranean context. Seersucker's characteristic texture is created by alternating areas of tight and loose weave, producing a surface that naturally holds air away from the body and feels light and comfortable even in warm conditions.

The Carolina bedspread in grey, beige, and white — currently available at a reduced price — and the Anisa in beige and blue both occupy the mid-range with a more structured, formal approach: these are bedspreads with a clear sense of decorative intention, designed to give the bed a properly dressed appearance for everyday use in a primary or guest bedroom.

The Stonewash Pin Tuck bedspread in white, beige, silver, and green — which we have written about in detail elsewhere on this site — is one of the newest additions to the collection and combines the stonewash finish with the refined pintuck texture for a product that manages to feel both relaxed and polished simultaneously. Its generous sizing across single, double, king, and super king makes it one of the most practically versatile options in the range, and the coordinating pillow shams with zip fastenings complete the dressed-bed look with a hotel-quality finish.

The luxury end — Arni and Arlet

At the premium end of the bedspreads collection, the Arni and Arlet ranges represent a step change in quality, construction, and visual impact that is immediately apparent even in product photographs.

The Arni Luxury Bedspread — available in grey, green, and beige, priced from €145 — is a deeply textured, richly constructed piece that brings genuine weight and presence to the bed. The fabric has the kind of quality that communicates itself through texture and drape rather than pattern, and it is the kind of bedspread around which a bedroom scheme can be built rather than one that is chosen to fit within an existing scheme. The Arni suits contemporary interiors with strong architectural elements — clean walls, considered furniture, an eye for proportion — and it photographs exceptionally well.

The Arlet Luxury Bedspread in ivory and beige, priced from €159, sits alongside the Arni as the collection's most refined and carefully crafted option. Like the Arni, it is a piece that rewards sustained attention — the fabric has depth and character that is difficult to convey in words but immediately apparent when encountered in person. For anyone furnishing a bedroom where quality and longevity matter more than price, the Arlet represents a considered investment in a product that will continue to look beautiful for many years.

Bed runners — the hotel finish at home

Several products in the collection function as bed runners — narrower, horizontal pieces designed to lie across the foot of the bed rather than cover it entirely. The bed runner is one of the most effective and most underused decorating tools available for the bedroom: placed across the foot of an otherwise simply dressed bed, it immediately creates a more layered, more considered appearance without the visual weight of a full bedspread. For hotel rental properties in particular, a bed runner is the single most efficient investment in visual presentation — it photographs beautifully, adds perceived quality, and protects the main bedding from foot-contact soiling during the day.

Bedspreads for Mediterranean Homes — Why the Dressed Bed Makes Sense on the Costa del Sol

There is a particular way of making a bed that is common in Mediterranean homes and almost universal in the better hotels of southern Spain, southern Italy, and the south of France — and it involves a bedspread. Not the tightly tucked, formally neat presentation of a traditional British hotel room, but something more relaxed and more assured: a bed that is properly covered, properly proportioned, and properly finished, with the bedspread lying smoothly across the surface, draping naturally at the sides, and creating the impression of a room that has been dressed rather than merely tidied.

This aesthetic is well suited to the physical and social reality of life on the Costa del Sol, where the bedroom — especially in apartments and villas with open-plan layouts or large windows — is a visible, inhabited space for more of the day than in a cooler climate where the primary purpose of the bedroom is simply sleeping. A room that is used for reading, resting, working, or simply sitting in at various points of the day needs to look its best throughout those hours, and a well-chosen bedspread is the most efficient single way to achieve that.

The climate argument

The Costa del Sol's climate makes the bedspread a more genuinely practical choice than it is in northern Europe. For roughly six months of the year — from May through to October — the temperatures at night are warm enough that sleeping under a full duvet is uncomfortable or impossible for many people. The options are to remove the duvet entirely and sleep under sheets, to use a very low-tog summer duvet, or to use a lightweight bedspread as the primary top covering. The third option has a significant advantage: it looks considerably better than a bare bed or a folded duvet, it is easier to arrange neatly in the morning, and the better lightweight options — the Edna range, the cotton waffle, the Maya seersucker — provide just enough warmth for the mildest of the summer nights without becoming uncomfortable as temperatures rise.

In the cooler months — November through March in particular — the bedspread reverts to its more traditional role as a decorative layer on top of a duvet, adding both additional warmth and a polished daytime appearance. The heavier options in the range — the Arni, the Arlet, the Carolina — are particularly well suited to this use, their fabric weight and construction making them genuinely warming as well as visually impressive.

Bedspreads for rental and holiday properties

For the large and well-established community of British holiday let owners on the Costa del Sol — managing properties in Mijas Costa, Fuengirola, Calahonda, Benalmádena, Marbella, and across the wider Málaga province — bedspreads are a practical and commercial consideration as much as a decorating one. Properties that are marketed on platforms such as Airbnb, Booking.com, or Homes & Villas compete on photography as much as on location and price, and the appearance of the beds in listing photographs has a direct and measurable impact on booking rates.

A properly dressed bed — sheets, duvet cover, and a bedspread or bed runner at the foot — photographs significantly better than a bed dressed with a duvet cover alone, regardless of how attractive that duvet cover may be. The depth and dimension of a bedspread, its drape over the side of the mattress, and the layered quality it gives to the overall composition of the bed make a listing photograph look more considered, more welcoming, and more aligned with the aesthetic quality that guests are paying for. The investment in a good-quality bedspread for each bedroom in a rental property is one of the most cost-effective improvements a property owner can make.

Yorkshire Linen Beds & More is well placed to help with exactly this kind of purchase — the store carries stock across the full range of the collection, the WhatsApp personal shopping service at (+34) 626 147 703 is available for advice and bulk purchasing, and delivery throughout mainland Spain, the Balearic Islands, and Portugal is available via the online store at yorkshirelinen.es, with all taxes included and free delivery on orders over €65. For trade customers managing multiple properties, bulk pricing is available — enquire via the website or in store at Ctra. Mijas-Fuengirola, Km 3.5, Mijas, open Monday to Friday 10am to 6pm and Saturday 10am to 5pm.