Our favorite cashmere sweater is 23% off — Stock up and save with the Naadam sale now
If there's one reliable basic that can be built into plenty of different outfits and last you many years, it's a cashmere sweater. Both cozy and breathable, cashmere is a great winter staple, though it's also notoriously expensive. Luckily, now's the perfect time to stock up for next season with the Naadam Original Cashmere Sweater Sale.
During the sale event, Naadam is offering their signature Original Cashmere Sweaters, which typically cost $98, at a discounted price. While the deal lasts, you can get one sweater for $85, a 13% discount, or two or more sweaters for $75 each, a 23% discount. Both the men's and women's sweaters are available in nearly 30 colors, so now's the perfect time to stock up on new hues.
Quality matters when it comes to cashmere, and Naadam makes some of the best. The brand earned the top spot in our guide to the best cashmere sweaters and holds up against more affordable alternatives from brands like Quince. The Original sweater is also celebrity-approved and was recently featured on Meghan Markle's ShopMy page.
Our style experts on the Reviews team can vouch for Naadam's quality. "If you're new to wearing cashmere, this is the sweater to start with. Naadam's Original Cashmere Sweater is a simple, low-maintenance crewneck that I can wear with anything. And though it's nearly summer, I still think it's worth investing in while it's on sale," says Gabrielle Chase, senior associate style and beauty editor.
The sweater's versatility is its true superpower, according to Chase. "On a warm day, you may not need it (except to drape around your shoulders for a preppy look). But when it cools down at night, you'll be glad you brought it. It's lightweight, super soft, and somehow breathable and insulating all at once. It's barely pilled in the year I've worn it. Plus, it comes in over a dozen colors. I recommend sizing up if you want a more relaxed fit."
Read our full Naadam cashmere sweater review to learn more about Naadam's materials and sustainability practices.
Naadam hasn't posted an official end date for the sale, so be sure to stock up while you can. Keep in mind that the prices shown here reflect the 13% discount for a single sweater, but adding multiple to your cart will give you the 23% discount.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Who tackles slugs in Meghan Markle's vegetable plot?
I CAN'T wait for our fruit and veg to be ready this year. When I've picked the perfect specimens of carrots, beans, lettuce, onions, courgettes and tomatoes I'll be sure to arrange them beautifully in a wicker basket and clutch it proudly while my husband takes a few pictures. I'll then stick them on Instagram for the world to admire. Of course this isn't true. I don't have an Instagram account but, more crucially, like last year and the year before that, it will be touch and go as to whether our crops are successful - last summer they were annihilated by slugs. I hate to admit I'm envious of Meghan Markle, Her vegetable garden yields crops worthy of red rosettes at The Yorkshire Show. She shared a picture on Instagram - reproduced on news websites - of a 'garden haul' of fresh produce seemingly grown at her Montecito mansion in California. There's broccoli, carrots, corn, red peppers and squash as well as spring onions and an assortment of fresh herbs. Meghan joins the growing band of celebrities and other rich and famous people showing off their home-grown produce on social media. Critics piled in with their cynical observations, chiefly the lack of soil on any of the Duchess of Sussex's produce. They've got a point. Does Meghan get her hands dirty tending her veg? Picture: Aaron Chown/PA David Beckham's crop of picture-perfect, freshly harvested radishes - which wife Victoria posted on social media - also caught my eye. 'He's been gardening all day and here he is, tending to his vegetable patch,' her caption read. Kneeling next to a raised bed, David clutches a clean-as-a-whistle horseradish just plucked from the garden at his Cotswold estate. It wasn't the lack of soil - although the veg was spotless - that struck me about the picture, it was his clean white canvas shoes and jeans. For someone who had been gardening all day there were no grubby knees. Maybe he'd just changed for the photo, who knows? I don't doubt that either Meghan or Becks garden. Both do, and they clearly enjoy it, which is great, but do they get stuck into any real grow-your-own gardening - the sort of hard slog, permanent dirt-under-the fingernails pursuits made famous by Tom and Barbara Good in the TV show The Good Life? If you ask me it's more like dabbling Growing crops demands real effort, on a daily basis, for many weeks of the year. It is hard work, as my husband and I have discovered in the 20 years since we acquired a garden. Preparing the soil and sowing takes time, then it's a constant battle to keep on top of pests: one week you're fighting blackfly on your broad beans, the next carrot fly - and not only on carrots - and white rot on onions and leeks. There's slugs, slugs and more slugs. I've even resorted to slug patrol at midnight, to remove the slimy beasts from our young courgette plants. I can't see Meghan or David doing that. Just-sown plants need protection from birds like pigeons, sparrows, and crows, and from cats raking up the soil. Then, perhaps most important of all, there's the weather: daily watering in dry spells, preventing waterlogging and keeping them upright throughout wet periods. The Beckhams' main residence is London - a long way from those raised beds. Growing veg presents great photo opportunities, but let's face it, many lifestyles are not conducive to tending them week-in-week-out. My husband and I are lucky, I suppose - our uneventful life means we can put in the hours. Having said that, it's good to know that if we were ever away cruising the Med or shopping in New York, our wonderful neighbours over the road would happily step in and do our watering. For many famous faces growing their own, there must be help behind the scenes. So, let's hear it for the many gardeners who are beavering away out of sight, hoes in hand.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Meghan Markle Posts Rare Footage Showing Pregnant Dance-Off With Harry
Meghan Markle is pulling back the curtain on the unconventional techniques she used when it came time to nudge labor along. The Duchess of Sussex — wife of Prince Harry and mother to Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet — recently marked her daughter's fourth trip around the sun with a series of Instagram posts on Wednesday. 'Happy birthday to our beautiful girl!' she wrote in the caption of one post. 'Four years ago today she came into our lives - and each day is brighter and better because of it. Thanks to all of those sending love and celebrating her special day!' Two black-and-white photos accompanied the post, showing Meghan snuggled up with Lilibet at different stages of the child's life. The duchess then shifted the focus to Harry in a separate post, spotlighting the father-daughter relationship. 'The sweetest bond to watch unfold,' she wrote. 'Daddy's little girl and favorite adventurer. Happy birthday Lili!' Then came a peek into Meghan's pregnancy journey as she shared footage from the delivery room where she waited with her husband for Lilibet's arrival. 'Four years ago today, this also happened,' she wrote. 'Both of our children were a week past their due dates… so when spicy food, all that walking, and acupuncture didn't work - there was only one thing left to do!' And that one thing? Dancing! Harry and Meghan can be seen joyfully moving to Cameron J Henderson's viral song 'The Baby Momma Dance' in a moment of levity and love. With lyrics like 'prego, but I still give moves like Beyoncé,' the song underscores Meghan's willingness to embrace humor, spontaneity and unconventional methods even in the final stretch of pregnancy. Meghan Markle's Baby Name Advice Is Worth Considering Gwyneth Paltrow Sets The Record Straight On Where Her Friendship Stands With Meghan Markle Prince Archie Turns 6, And Meghan Markle Has 1 Question All Parents Can Relate To
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Meghan Markle's Netflix show likely to get another season: Source
Welcome to 'The Scoop' — the ultimate back-to-the-office water cooler cheat sheet, your go-to source for all things everyone really wants to know! Get the latest on everything from the political swamp maneuvering in D.C. and Hollywood drama to jaw-dropping small-town shenanigans from Paula Froelich. (NewsNation) — This week, Meghan Markle bizarrely announced on her 'Confessions of a Female Founder' podcast that she was putting her As Ever line of food products on pause before 'restocking' to ensure everything was 'stable' — telling guest Tina Knowles, 'I'm looking at it, saying, just pause. That happened. Let's wait until we are completely stable and we have everything we need.' As I reported (and people are now just picking up on) earlier this year, Markle had only a 'limited supply' of products — jams, dried flower sprinkles, crepe mix, etc — ensuring they would sell through quickly, a common marketing gimmick. As I also reported, the 'second season' announced immediately after the first dropped, was a turn of phrase as the shows had already been shot, and it gave editors time to edit in As Ever products. Michelle Obama to release style book to spotlight 'the way our society defines beauty' But I'm now hearing that Markle will be granted a third season, regardless of viewership, as Netflix is invested in making her product line and show a success. It is the first time Netflix has fully produced a product line and, like QVC or Home Shopping Network, sees it as a new cash cow for them (doing shows and selling products from these shows that Netflix manufactures). The new line of As Ever products is said to include tablecloths, linens, silverware and everything one would need to make a pretty table scape… something Markle, a visualist, is very keen on. And a third season of the show will focus on the new As Ever products — and how people at home can buy them. Markle, whose show 'With Love, Meghan' dropped off Netflix's top ten in less than a week, may have alienated her agent, her coworkers and the royal family, but she has one big supporter in her corner… Netflix head Ted Sarandos. In an interview with Variety (which called the show a 'forced march') Sarandos said, 'I think Meghan is underestimated in terms of her influence on culture. When we dropped the trailer for the 'Harry & Meghan' doc series (in 2022), everything on-screen was dissected in the press for days. The shoes she was wearing sold out all over the world. The Hermès blanket that was on the chair behind her sold out everywhere in the world. People are fascinated with Meghan Markle. She and Harry are overly dismissed.' Prince Harry spoke with uncle about taking Princess Diana's surname: Report I hear that while most people are 'done' with the Sussex crew at Netflix, this third season will be a Hail Mary to try and see if commerce and entertainment really can be combined for a profit at the streamer. A rep for Markle didn't return emails. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.