New parents ask this question every single day — and it makes complete sense. You've been handed a muslin swaddle, told it's the best thing since the pram, and then you've looked at a grey British November morning and thought: is this thin bit of cotton really going to be enough?
The honest answer: yes — but not in the way you might expect. Muslin doesn't work like a duvet. It works like a thermostat.
Here's everything you need to know, season by season.
How Muslin Actually Works
Before we get into temperatures, it helps to understand what muslin is doing.
A muslin swaddle is woven loosely — that open weave is intentional. It allows air to move through the fabric, which means two things:
- In warm conditions, heat escapes and your baby stays cool
- In cool conditions, it traps just enough warmth while still breathing
This is called passive temperature regulation, and it's why muslin has been used for babies across cultures for hundreds of years — long before central heating existed. The fabric doesn't add warmth on its own; it works with whatever your baby is wearing underneath and the conditions of the room.
This is also why the NHS and The Lullaby Trust recommend breathable fabrics for sleep. Overheating is one of the key risk factors linked to SIDS, and muslin's open weave actively reduces that risk.
The Layering Principle
The muslin swaddle is always the outer layer. What goes underneath is what you adjust based on the season.
Think of it like this: the muslin is your baby's duvet cover. The vest and sleepsuit are the duvet inside. You change the filling based on the weather — not the cover.
Season-by-Season UK Guide
Spring (March – May) · Typical room temp: 17°C – 20°C
Spring in the UK is unpredictable — a warm afternoon can become a cold night quickly. This is actually where muslin shines most.
What to dress baby in:
- Long-sleeve cotton vest
- Light sleepsuit (0.5 tog)
Swaddle: Single muslin swaddle, tucked snugly
Watch for: Rooms warming up quickly in the afternoon. Check your baby's chest temperature (not hands or feet — these are always cooler) before adding layers.
Summer (June – August) · Typical room temp: 20°C – 26°C+
UK summers are mild but increasingly warm. The risk in summer is overheating, not cold — and this is where muslin is genuinely the best material you can use.
What to dress baby in:
- Nappy only (above 24°C)
- Short-sleeve vest (20°C – 23°C)
Swaddle: Single muslin layer — no additional blanket
Watch for: Rooms staying warm overnight. Use a fan to circulate air (not pointed directly at baby). A muslin is ideal here because anything thicker risks overheating.
UK heatwaves are becoming more common. A muslin swaddle over just a nappy is one of the safest summer sleep setups available.
Autumn (September – November) · Typical room temp: 16°C – 19°C
This is the classic British sweet spot — cool enough to need layers, not cold enough for heavy bedding. Muslin handles this range perfectly.
What to dress baby in:
- Long-sleeve vest
- Full sleepsuit (1.0 tog)
Swaddle: Single muslin swaddle
No additional blanket needed at this temperature range — the swaddle over a sleepsuit is sufficient.
Winter (December – February) · Typical room temp: 14°C – 17°C
This is the question parents worry about most. Can a muslin swaddle really work in a cold UK winter?
Yes — with the right approach.
What to dress baby in:
- Short-sleeve vest underneath
- Long-sleeve vest on top
- Warm sleepsuit (2.0 tog or fleece-lined)
Swaddle: Muslin swaddle as the wrap layer, plus a lightweight sleeping bag (0.5 tog) over the top if the room is below 16°C
Key principle: The muslin swaddle stays as the inner wrap (for the arms-down swaddling position). The sleeping bag goes over the top. This setup keeps baby snug without the risk of loose bedding near the face.
Never use: Heavy blankets, quilts, or duvets over a swaddled baby — these can cause overheating even in winter and create a suffocation risk if they shift during sleep.
Quick Reference: UK Temperature Guide
| Room Temp | Baby's Clothing | Swaddle | Extra Layer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26°C + | Nappy only | Muslin swaddle | None |
| 22 – 25°C | Short-sleeve vest | Muslin swaddle | None |
| 18 – 21°C | Long-sleeve vest + sleepsuit | Muslin swaddle | None |
| 16 – 17°C | Vest + warm sleepsuit | Muslin swaddle | 0.5 tog sleeping bag |
| Below 16°C | Vest + warm sleepsuit | Muslin swaddle | 1.0 tog sleeping bag |
The Lullaby Trust recommends keeping your baby's room between 16°C and 20°C for sleep. A basic room thermometer (under £5) is one of the most useful things you can own as a new parent.
How to Check If Your Baby Is Too Hot or Too Cold
Forget the hands and feet — these are almost always cool in babies and are not a reliable guide.
Check the chest or back of the neck. It should feel:
- Warm and dry → temperature is right
- Hot and sweaty → too warm, remove a layer
- Cool to the touch → too cold, add a layer
Does the Size of the Muslin Matter for Warmth?
Yes — and this is underappreciated.
A small muslin square (70x70cm) will come loose during sleep. A loose swaddle doesn't just lose its calming effect — loose fabric near a baby's face is a safety risk, and a baby who has wriggled free of their wrap will get cold faster.
For effective swaddling, you need a large muslin swaddle — at least 120x120cm. This gives you enough fabric to wrap securely, tuck properly, and maintain warmth through the night without coming loose.
At Deux Lapins, our muslin swaddles are generously sized and made from 100% OEKO-TEX certified cotton — specifically designed to hold their shape and their wrap through a full night's sleep.
When to Stop Using a Swaddle
The warmth question naturally leads to this one. Most babies transition out of swaddling between 2 and 4 months, when they begin showing signs of rolling.
At that point, the swaddle doesn't disappear — it just changes role. A large muslin becomes a pram blanket, a light cot layer, or a nursing cover.
The Short Answer
A muslin swaddle is warm enough for every UK season — provided you adjust what your baby wears underneath. It's not a single-season product; it's a year-round tool that responds to the conditions you create around it.
The key is layering smart, checking the room temperature, and reading your baby's signals. Muslin makes that easier than almost any other fabric.
Shop Deux Lapins
Our muslin swaddles are sized for a proper, secure wrap — large enough to last from newborn through to the rolling transition, and made from fabric that gets softer with every wash.
Sources: The Lullaby Trust (UK) · NHS Baby Sleep Safety · OEKO-TEX Standard 100
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