Travel & Comfort

Plane Travel: Why you sweat under your mask (and the 3D solution)

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Long-haul flights and train rides are exhausting enough. You put on your sleep mask to block out the reading lights, but within an hour, you wake up: your face is hot, you're sweating, and light is leaking in around your nose. The problem? You are wearing a synthetic sponge.

The Sauna Effect of Synthetic Masks

Most travel masks are made of polyester or synthetic memory foam. These petrochemical materials act like plastic bags—they trap body heat and block airflow. In a dry, pressurized airplane cabin, this leads to intense sweating, clogged pores, and uncomfortable humidity around your eyes.

"Mulberry silk is naturally thermoregulating. A 100% silk 3D mask wicks away moisture and lets your skin breathe. You get total darkness without the sauna effect."
Silkhouse 3D Silk Travel Sleep Mask

100% Blackout, 0% Pressure

When you sleep upright in a transport seat, gravity and head movements push standard masks into your eyeballs, causing blurred vision upon waking. The Silkhouse 3D mask solves this with deep, molded cavities. It creates a pitch-black vault over your eyes without ever touching your eyelids.

Because true comfort comes from purity, our mask is completely devoid of scratchy embroidery or useless logos. It is a seamless, 100% smooth silk experience designed for pure clinical efficiency and restorative travel sleep.

The Travel Essential

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