Hope you like really good deals on really good things.
Every product is independently selected by editors. If you buy something through our links, New York may earn an affiliate commission. | | | Illustration: by María Jesús Contreras | | We hope your fingers are in peak clicking condition, because our Two-Day (Actually Good) Sale is now live. Throughout today and tomorrow, we'll be updating this story with Strategist-only sale prices — most of which are the deepest discounts we've seen — on 50 of our favorite brands and products. And as newsletter subscribers, you also get access to newsletter-only deals that won't appear on the site (lucky you). Keep scrolling for savings on swimwear that truly fits, supportive running shorts, and "incredibly soft" loafers. | | shop our two-day (actually good) sale » | | | | | If you've ever wanted your swim top to feel just as supportive and sexy as your favorite bra, this deal's for you. Through tomorrow, Strategist newsletter readers can save 20 percent on any order of Cuup swimwear totaling $150 or more, with code STRATSWIM20. The brand's swim tops mimic the style and construction of their underwire bras, which we've praised here and here as being among the best in their class. (Cuup's plunge bra, in particular, gets rave reviews for being supportive and offering a hint of lift and subtle cleavage.) You can shop the plunge swim top here, and if you pair it with a bottom (bikini, brief, high-waisted or tap short), you can meet the $150 threshold and claim your discount. Or get two bottoms, or two different tops — it's a real choose-your-own swimwear adventure. | | | | | We love a loafer here at the Strategist, and M.Gemi makes a very good loafer. Former writer Chloe Anello is a particular fan of the brand's Silvia loafers, which she calls "incredibly soft." The suede loafers "mold to your feet — even after one wear, I felt like they were already broken in and comfortable enough," she explains. "I personally love the Elvis-esque blue suede, but they come in an equally jazzy snakeskin print, brown suede, or more toned-down neutrals like brown, black, navy, and gray leather." And if you're more of a ballet flats fanatic — or would like some just-high-enough heeled sandals for that summer wedding on the calendar — know that all new M.Gemi shoppers can enjoy 20 percent off on any full-price product with code STRAT20. | | | | | If we're going to put in the effort to go for a run (all that shoelace-tying! All that… running!), it's nice to wear something supportive that meets us halfway and helps out a bit. For that reason, we're fans of these Hudson Shorts from Outdoor Voices, which are 30 percent off with code STRATSHORTS. Seasoned marathon runner Karen Iorio Adelson likes running in them because they provide good core support even on days when she feels a bit bloated. "The flat, wide waistband keeps everything sucked in while still letting my legs move freely," she says. Adelson also likes that the color-block silhouette "echoes Outdoor Voices' popular leggings style, so they're a hint trendier than the standard short." | | | | | Ah, wine subscriptions — the closest we can get to having wine magically manifest at our door. And when it comes to figuring out exactly which bottles of fermented grape juice we should be drinking, we trust our food-and-drink obsessed friends over at Eater. Their Eater Wine Club is basically the mail-order version of a trusted restaurant sommelier encouraging you to try their new favorite bottles. "Every month we choose a new wine expert from a restaurant or shop that we love and they put together a box of restaurant-quality wine from small producers they're excited about," explains Eater editor-in-chief Amanda Kludt. Subscription tiers range from $70 for two bottles per month to $150 for six bottles per month. But when you use the exclusive code STRAT30, you can get 30 percent off your first month. Looking to buy a gift for someone else? Use the code GIFT20 for 20 percent off the first month of a six-month gift subscription. | | | | | We know — we're obviously biased when we talk about how great New York's stories and reporting and reviews are. But you know who else reads New York? Netflix. The streaming network used Jessica Pressler's story on Anna Delvey (née Sorokin) as the inspiration for Inventing Anna, and William Brannan's report on Jamison Bachman was the genesis for an episode of their Worst Roommate Ever docuseries. To keep ahead of the next big thing in binge watching, Strategist readers can save 50 percent on a print-plus-digital subscription to New York (or 65 percent on digital only) when subscribing through this link. Because the only thing better than saying "I've seen that!" is saying "I've read that." | | | |
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