
From pearl studs for June babies to a fiery ruby ring for July, most of us have received at least one birthstone treasure meant to align with our natural energy. But the magic of these gems isn’t limited to jewelry – each one comes with a signature color that translates beautifully beyond the velvet box.
That same palette can easily find its way into the bedroom through your bed sheets. Birth-month hues are traditionally tied to qualities like elegance, clarity, or power – and just as wearing your stone is thought to invite a little luck, decorating with its color brings a similar sense of personal meaning to the home.
In the bedroom, that might mean sheets, quilts, or coverlets in the tone tied to your birth month, giving the bed a touch more character than your standard white set. From fabric and pattern to the perfect bed sheet flounce, here’s how to bring your birthstone’s color into bedding that feels every bit as special as the gem itself.
Birth-Month Bedding Colors, Explained
What bed sheets say 'September'? And which duvet shade feels most 'December'? Ahead, I break down every birth-month bedding color, along with the sets I recommend most as a style editor.
January: Garnet Red

January’s gemstone is the garnet – a deep, decadent red closely tied to shades like burgundy, oxblood, and bordeaux. These moody cousins have been editorial bedding favorites for the past few years, championed by designers like Shea McGee as something of a shorthand to bedroom cool, thanks to their demure flair.
While the shade might sound like a strictly cold-weather affair, brands like Quince and Bed Threads temper its intensity in airy European linen, giving the color both visual and literal breathability that works just as well in warmer months.
It also pairs beautifully with sweeter accents – think HOMMEY’s barely-there pink pinstripes or Anthropologie’s drifting botanical prints. And of course, a shade this rich begs for a luxury bed sheet material to match: silk. Brands like Blissy, known for their lustrous pillowcases, let this gemstone tone gleam in all the right ways.
February: Amethyst Purple

'Purple' could signal many shades, but February’s amethyst entails a specific lavender-to-violet mix, capturing the nuance found in the crystal’s naturally faceted structure. Consider echoing this perfectly imperfect appearance in your bedding, layering a deeper violet fitted and flat sheet with a lavender duvet, or reversing the order for a similarly tonal effect.
Starting on the lighter end of the spectrum, GreenRow’s Linen Ruffle Duvet Set whispers its romance, letting linen’s natural airiness soften the shade with skirted flounces, while Pottery Barn’s Sorrel Toile offers something slightly moodier – equally vintage-inspired, but with a more polished, grown-up sensibility.
Though its name might suggest otherwise, the ‘Plum’ colorway of Boll & Branch’s Signature Comforter Set is a surprisingly spot-on middle-ground amethyst to marry the two.
March: Aquamarine Blue

March’s aquamarine could easily pass for the ‘mint green’ color trend many of us remember from 2016 – and if the runways and pop culture are any indication, both the era and the shade are very much back in rotation.
Lean right into the current fashion fanfare with bedding that feels just as sartorial. The cool-kid-coded Studio Linen from Nordic Knots captures that breezy, ocean-adjacent ease, draping effortlessly across the bed as a final layer when the weather warms. California brand Coyuchi takes things in a similarly calm direction with its Surf Chambray Organic Crinkled Percale, packed with wrinkles reminiscent of the perfect beach-day button-down.
And if you’re feeling indulgent, Matouk’s Aquamarine Nocturne collection is about as apropos for aquamarine as its name suggests.
April: Diamond White

April babies get the trickiest assignment of all: the diamond, being that the hallmark of a truly exceptional stone is no color whatsoever. Most would translate that to white, though the more accurate interpretation might involve a touch of something reflective, something luminous like chrome. Still, stick too hard to silver, and the illusion breaks, so a bit of artistic license is required.
To capture the diamond's high jewelry associations, I love the hand-sewn gathers of Z Gallerie’s Avignon Bedding, or the crisp hotel-style piping perfected by Ralph Lauren Home and Serena & Lily, where a whisper of silvery sheen along the border adds dimension to classic sateen.
For something that splits the difference, LUXOME’s Luxury Sheet Set in Dune offers the same polished effect with a more eye-catching, faceted glow.
May: Emerald Green

May’s emerald green carries a certain polished confidence – Michelle Pfeiffer’s iconic evening gown in Scarface (1983) comes to mind. It’s striking without feeling showy, the sort of color that lands somewhere between ease and opulence. That balance translates well to the bedroom, though it’s best approached with a light hand.
Some materials can push the tone a little too far. Silk, for instance – even high-grade mulberry – tends to make emerald veer slightly theatrical. Linen, on the other hand, reins things in. Prewashed sheets from Piglet in Bed strike the right rumpled note, relaxing the richness of the color.
Brooklinen’s Breezeweave Crinkle Cotton Duvet Set in Botanical Green offers another slightly softer take on the jewel tone, which works particularly well layered alongside earthy browns and creamy neutrals.
June: Pearl White

Pearls have a kind of iridescence that, much like a diamond, makes calling them simply ‘white’ feel a little reductive – though it remains the easiest shorthand. In reality, the tone sits somewhere between warm oyster creams and soft shell pinks, with a subtle luminosity that shifts depending on the light. The goal in bedding, then, is to capture that same reflective quality – ideally with a material that catches the light and reveals more than one shade at once.
Silk, sateen, and bamboo viscose are particularly well-suited to the task. For the former, LilySilk’s Natural White Lily Jacquard Duvet Cover, inspired by an evening garden in bloom, brings the kind of soft sheen that pearls are known for.
For something equally luminous but slightly more relaxed, LUXOME’s bamboo sheet sets – available in white, ivory, and blush – all fall comfortably within the pearl palette.
July: Ruby Red

Synonymous with cinematic slippers and the yellow brick road, July’s ruby red is a joyful, high-energy shade that commands attention and stimulates the senses. That social spirit might seem slightly at odds with the bedroom’s primary purpose – sleep – but the color becomes far more livable when you lean into its softer side. Think less fire-engine, more deep raspberry.
The Berry colorway from Bed Threads toes that line nicely, keeping the richness of classic red without reading too boisterous.
Brooklinen’s Lotus Bridge Check Washed Percale Sheet Set takes a similarly thoughtful approach, pairing ruby with softer lilac and beige notes. The red still leads, but from across the bedroom, the look leans calmer – and much easier to rest with.
August: Peridot Chartreuse

Peridot lives in that electric yellow-green zone best described as chartreuse. It’s a shade with serious star power, so a little restraint goes a long way in the bedroom, particularly if you're hoping to distance it from any 'Brat Green' baggage circa 2024.
Ornate chinoiserie-style prints work beautifully here, especially in silky Egyptian cotton if you’re feeling fancy, or even in more affordable glossy sateen iterations from retailers like Wayfair.
Anthropologie takes a lighter approach with botanical-patterned sheets softened by touches of cream, while pieces like Matouk’s Nocturne Sham in Grass embrace the saturated solid outright and look all the cooler for it.
September: Sapphire Blue

Sapphires mesmerize with their deep, enigmatic blue. Like the night sky itself, this September shade carries both elegance and calm, the sort of expansive darkness that feels perfectly suited to a bedroom.
There are plenty of ways to bring that depth into bedding without letting the color feel heavy. Brooklinen’s Ribbed Matelassé Quilt weaves cream through its Harbour Check pattern, adding texture and nuance to the navy base. Pottery Barn’s Flax Linen Frame Duvet Cover takes a more tailored approach, outlining the deep blue with crisp white piping that captures something of a sapphire’s glint when it catches the light.
And if you prefer a lighter look during sunnier months, simply reverse the balance: a white sheet set framed with a navy border (Serena & Lily’s Beach Club is a classic) still nods to the birthstone without drenching the entire bedscape in midnight tones.
October: Tourmaline Pink

Pink occasionally earns an unfair reputation for feeling a bit childish, but October’s tourmaline iteration is a far cry, reading romantic, polished, and very grown-up. In fact, it’s just the sort of shade you might see splashed across the walls of a well-appointed Palm Beach sitting room, a chromatic cross between faded coral and antique rose.
The Portugal-made Stonewashed Sheet Set from The Citizenry in Rose captures that sophisticated sweetness, its slightly weathered finish reading like a beloved heirloom that’s spent a few seasons in the sun.
Tourmaline is a pink with personality, which means it also loves talking to textural details. Quilting is an obvious place to start: Brooklinen’s subtly off-kilter stitching feels relaxed and modern, while Pottery Barn’s tufted take reads a little more tailored.
November: Citrine Orange

From the recent runaway success of IKEA’s original orange-only VARMBLIXT lamp to the butter-yellow obsession of a few seasons ago, anything along this warm, glowing spectrum falls squarely within November’s citrine territory.
Burnt, slightly ’70s, with a touch of honey – Parachute’s pigment-drenched Marigold colorway captures that cool with the ease only European linen can provide, especially as the fitted sheet layered beneath a slightly deeper layer – say, a tobacco-toned duvet.
Citrine also happens to thrive on nuance and pattern, so opt for sheets like Anthropologie’s Organic Cotton Percale Printed Set in its sun motif (or even a simple yellow gingham) to add dimension without diluting the warmth. And if you ever feel like tapping into the shade’s countercultural roots, Bed Threads’ turmeric-bordered pillow shams make a playful finishing layer atop more neutral bedding.
December: Tanzanite Blue

Some say December belongs to blue topaz, others to turquoise, but for the purposes of this birth-month bedding exercise – and to avoid stepping on March’s toes – we’re leaning into the rarest association of all: tanzanite. The stone’s ethereal blue-violet hue is said to be 1,000 times rarer than diamonds, found only in a four-square-mile pocket near Mount Kilimanjaro.
Big shoes to fill. But in bedding, the closest translation is probably cobalt, which captures that same saturated, luminous depth. On the higher end, HAY’s Outline Duvet Cover in Vivid Blue lands the tone beautifully, while Urban Outfitters’ Dazzling Blue Cotton Percale offers a more approachable take on the shade.
If you’d rather push the color a little further, Marimekko’s Unikko Duvet Cover Set wakes it up with icy blue, black, and white – a slightly graphic approach that gives the bedscape a bit more attitude.
The logic behind birth-month colors isn’t so different from astrology. Looking beyond the bedroom, see what your star sign says about how you should decorate your home in 2026 for a fresh layer of personality and alignment in your interiors.
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