
Paloma Wool
Nasem Sheer Piped Cami
The Nasem Sheer Piped Cami by Paloma Wool is a cropped, fitted camisole top made from a blend of 70% organic cotton and 30% polyamide jersey. It features a rounded neckline and adjustable thin straps, designed with a sheer, transparent fabric inspired by lingerie. Available in grey, this top is suitable for layering and is made in Portugal.
- Color
- Grey
- Material
- 70% organic cotton, 30% polyamide
- Gender
- female
- Style
- minimal, modern, elevated-basics
- Category
- Apparel & Accessories > Clothing > Shirts & Tops
Color
Size
Specifications
Delicate and lightweight jersey voile cami with thin straps, inspired by lingerie, cropped and fitted.
Sheer fabric, adjustable thin straps, rounded neckline, cropped fit, organic cotton.
- Color
- Grey · gray
- Material
- 70% organic cotton, 30% polyamide
- Secondary
- polyamide
- Style
- minimal, modern, elevated-basics
- Occasion
- date-night, everyday, vacation
- Gender
- female
- Age Group
- adult
- Condition
- new
- Category
- Apparel & Accessories > Clothing > Shirts & Tops
Additional Attributes
- fine organic cotton jersey
- rounded neckline
- adjustable thin straps
- cropped and fitted silhouette
- sheer jersey voile fabric
- lingerie-inspired design
- made in Portugal
- matching bra available separately
- part of Vision sustainable program
- organic cotton composition
- water conscious production
- reduction of emissions
Product Insights
Paloma Wool’s Nasem Sheer Piped Cami—a cropped, adjustable organic cotton voile layer intentionally sheer to reveal a matching bra (sold separately)—delivers refined lingerie detailing via satin binding and a V-stitch. The whisper-weight fabric, cropped hem, and slider straps empower wearer-driven styling from under-blazer polish to summer swim cover. Hand-finished in small Portuguese batches by a family-run network, it embodies the brand’s artist-led, anti-marketing community and editorial cachet, making a $275 CA investment in year-round versatility and ethical craft, with the trade-off of added bra cost and the need for confident sheer dressing.
The Art of Sheer Layering
Sheer Filter
Voile acts as sheer filter: appearance shifts with skin tone and underlayers.
Wearer Agency
Adjustable straps, cropped hem, sheer fabric allow multiple wearer-driven silhouettes.
Matching Bra Set
Bra sold separately; designed to be visible underneath for intentional lingerie-as-outerwear.
Layering Building Block
Seen through, over, and under other garments — never a hidden layer.
Year-Round Layering
Voile weight lies flat under winter knits, stands alone in summer.
Strap Adjustability
Sliders shorten for a demure peek under blazers, lengthen for elongated torso.
Contrast Binding
Satin neckline binding adds sheen, framing the face under jackets.
V-Stitch Detail
V-stitch draws eye inward, giving visual weight when partially concealed.
Grey Tonal Palette
Grey shade blends with brand's earthy palette for effortless tonal layering.
Quiet Sheer Minimalism
Lingerie simplicity brings sheer trend without runway spectacle.
Narrative Control
Sheer fabric lets wearer curate exposure: blazer-on or bra-out.
Breathable Layering
Organic cotton voile breathes; no sticky cling of synthetic sheers.
Cropped Proportion
Hem ends below bust; defines waist with high-waisted pieces.
Sheer Blouse Proxy
Camisole entry to sheer blouse trend; less commitment than full gown.
Street Style Template
Fits Copenhagen Fashion Week formula: sheer top + high-waist denim + blazer.
Editor Credibility
Harper’s Bazaar featured brand in sheer guide; authority confirmed.
Anti-Commercial Community
Stark simplicity signals membership in brand’s artistic circle, not trend tribe.
Dual-Purpose Designer Item
Daytime layering essential and recognizable designer piece for evening.
Sustainability Narrative
Organic cotton backed by brand material rule book; eco appeal.
Artistic Roots & Design Legacy
Photographic Origins
Filmic grey hue, semi-transparent: clothing as vessel for image and memory.
Intimate Dressing
Ultra-light voile turns top into skin filter, not solid garment—physicalizing intimate dressing.
Post-2022 Refinement
Grey voile reflects post-2022 shift to subdued sophistication after Barcelona runway debut.
Artist Collaboration
Staple camis infused with artist collaboration; creative direction by Carlota Guerrero and others.
Community Building
Logo-free, ornament-free: 800k community built on grainy artist imagery, not influencer campaigns.
Body Agency
Adjustable straps, cropped cut, sheer fabric give wearer full control over silhouette and exposure.
Material Ethics
Organic cotton voile governed by internal rulebook prioritizing recycled fibers and demand-limited runs.
Quiet Sheer
Lingerie-inspired simplicity counters maximalist sheer trends from Chloé/Valentino; nostalgia-infused femininity.
90s Nostalgia
Echoes Kate Moss transparent slips and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy minimalism—effortless sensuality, not fleeting trend.
Contrast Binding
Satin contrast binding outlines cami as intentional outerwear, not undergarment.
Directional Stitch
V-shaped center stitch adds artful directional texture, elevating the basic sheer layer.
Matching Set
Matching bra (sold separately) creates coordinated sheer-opaque lingerie set.
Layering Core
Engineered as see-through building block for signature artful textural layering.
Cropped Proportions
Cropped straight hem highlights waist via negative space; pairs with high-waist pieces.
Palette Integration
Grey integrates into low-contrast earthy palette; pairs with dusty rose, ecru, faded black.
Family Production
Made in Portugal by decade-old family factories; rejects offshore for local artisanal craft.
Whisper-Weight Fabric
Whisper-weight 70/30 voile co-developed with Portuguese mills; lies flat under knits, holds shape.
Construction & Finishing Details
- Binding Finish
- Satin contrast binding with subtle sheen; lingerie-inspired finish.
- Topstitching
- Tonal topstitching matches fabric for seamless, minimal look.
- Center Front Detail
- Decorative V-stitch draws eye inward with directional texture.
- Strap Adjustment
- Slider-adjusted straps for precise neckline; minimalist elegance > convertible versatility.
- Production Batch
- Small-batch (MOQ 50–300) in Porto/Braga ensures clean binding and finishing.
- Hem Proportion
- Cropped, straight hem sits just below bust; sheer-centric focal point.
- Value Drivers
- Satin piping & V-stitch command $125 premium over pure silk camisoles lacking such finishings.
Fit, stretch, and how the straps change everything
- Neckline Adjustment
- Slider straps allow continuous raising and lowering of the neckline.
- Strap Reconfigurability
- Straps are non-removable and non-convertible; only vertical neckline shift.
- Hem Length & Pairing
- Cropped, sits just under bust; designed for high-waisted trousers or denim.
- Bust Sizing
- Size up for larger busts to maintain drape and avoid over-stretching.
- Layering Bulk
- Whisper-weight voile lies flat under chunky knits or blazers.
- Coverage Control
- Sheer fabric meant to layer over the matching bra; wearer sets the modesty.
- Multi-Wear
- Wear backwards, layered over bra, or alone for different silhouettes.
- Visual Proportion
- Strap length shifts neckline, altering collarbone and shoulder framing.
- Stretch Security
- Jersey voile stretch moves with the body, preventing gaping and exposure.
- Binding Frame
- Satin binding outlines neckline, creating a framed effect under open layers.
- V-Stitch Detail
- V-shaped front stitch draws eye inward, elongating the torso.
- Color Elongation
- Grey colorway creates near-monochromatic look with high-waisted pieces, elongating silhouette.
- Street Style Template
- Cropped cut + sheer = Copenhagen formula; pair with high-waisted denim and blazers.
Feel, Breathability & Care
- Layering
- Lies flat under chunky knits without bulk, holds shape worn alone
- Breathability
- Matte finish organic cotton breathes well, avoids clammy synthetic cling
- Shape retention
- 30% polyamide adds stretch memory; survives cold-machine cycles without distortion
- Sheerness effect
- Acts as skin-tone filter; color shifts depending on underlayer
- Binding finish
- Satin contrast binding adds gloss and structure; deliberate lingerie hand
- Custom mill hand
- Whisper-weight hand and semi-sheer drape from proprietary factory partnership
Made in Portugal: Luxury Craft at a Human Scale
- Production legacy
- Porto/Braga clusters: generational fine-gauge cotton expertise for luxury houses.
- Batch size
- Small 50–300 unit runs yield seam consistency and minimal quality variance.
- Labour standards
- EU directive prohibits forced/child labour; statutory force, not just brand promise.
- Fabric development
- Co-developed jersey voile: whisper-weight, semi-sheer drape, machine-washable.
- Industry context
- Post-consolidation market: precision finishing and innovation are entry stakes.
- Binding technique
- Lingerie-derived satin binding: multi-step manual finishing by skilled artisans.
- Care resilience
- Machine wash cool, dry flat; engineered durability belies the delicate sheer.
- Supply chain
- Decade-long partnership with family-owned factories in Spain and Portugal.
- Market validation
- 28% annual surge in European-origin premium lines; shoppers pay for craftsmanship.
Why $275? The premium unpacked
- Material cost floor
- Organic cotton & Portugal mfg raise base cost 30-50% vs Asian synthetics
- Brand premium over silk
- $125 more than silk Lorette cami; brand visual language & piped finish drive value
- Cult peer group
- Prices with Ganni/Toteme; 'cult favorite' (Who What Wear) & Paris Fashion Week cred
- Stable pricing
- Full retail $200-210 USD; no systemic discounting – value won't suddenly devalue
- Labor-intensive finishing
- Contrast binding at neckline/straps: lingerie-grade cut-and-sew steps beyond basic sheers
- Design detailing: V-stitch
- Delicate V-shaped front stitch adds directional texture, elevating from basic sheer layer
- Year-round versatility
- Whisper-weight jersey voile; underpins knits winter, breathes solo summer
- Ethical production
- Portugal EU labor law factory; decade-long family supply chain; enforceable worker welfare
- Limited batch exclusivity
- Likely ~50-300 unit batch; line-by-line attention, lower variance, exclusivity feel
- Made in Europe trend
- 28% surge in European-origin marketing; 'Made in Portugal' rivals 'Made in Italy' prestige
- Sheer trend entry point
- Wearable sheer for naked-dress era; less intimidating than full-transparent looks
- Editorial sheer authority
- Harper's Bazaar featured other Paloma Wool sheers; label is an authority, not one-off
- Wearable art narrative
- Rooted in Paloma Lanna's manifesto; clothing as memory, intimacy, body agency
- Demand-driven production
- Organic cotton aligns with brand's material rule book; demand-led mfg reduces waste
- Wearer agency design
- Adjustable straps, cropped, sheer for personal styling – wear backwards, layer, pair with bra
- Organic cotton breathability
- Matte finish, breathable; beats synthetic sheers for summer layering over swimwear
- Luxury supply chain
- Porto/Braga clusters supply LVMH/Kering; inherits same fine-gauge knit expertise
- Tonal wardrobe integration
- Grey colorway aligns with Paloma Wool's low-contrast, earthy palette for mix-and-match
- 8x fast-fashion comparison
- Over 8x more than $25 Intimissimi sheer; shift from lounge to design-brand collectible
- Cropped proportion styling
- Hem falls just below bust, engineered for high-waisted pairings to define waistline
- Industry consolidation quality
- Portugal's post-purge survivors focus on value-added, high-precision finishing
- Authenticity, no influencer
- 800k Instagram built on unfiltered art, not paid ads; price reflects product, not ad spend
- Total set cost
- Matching bra sold separately; coordinated look requires additional purchase
How to wear it: outfit formulas for every season
- Under open jacket
- Satin binding creates intentional lingerie framing
- Texture accent
- V-stitch adds directional detail under low necklines
- Four-season layering
- Whisper-weight jersey lies flat under chunky knits without bulk
- Visible layering intent
- Designed to be deliberately seen through and over garments
- Lingerie set look
- Wear with matching bra for coordinated lingerie-as-outerwear
- High-waist proportion
- Cropped hem creates waistline above high-rise bottoms
- Adjustable neckline
- Slider straps change drape and necklace layering
- Tonal palette
- Grey blends with dusty rose, ecru, faded black for curated looks
- Everyday sheer
- Minimalist cut offers an approachable version of naked dressing
- Copenhagen formula
- Sheer cami + high-waisted denim + oversized blazer
- Summer swim cover
- Breathable matte voile layers over swimsuits in hot weather
- Exposure curation
- Deliberate sheer allows full coverage to just-nipple styling
- Day-to-night swap
- Tailored trousers and heels transform into evening lingerie look
- Polished finish
- Lingerie-grade piping and topstitching elevate above basic sheer
- 90s revival
- Slip skirt + minimal heels for Kate Moss-era minimalism
- Elevated everyday
- Grey jersey anchors sophisticated-but-casual dress codes
The Sheer Phenomenon: Editorial Backing & Real-World Adoption
- Sheer blouse era (Vogue UK); easy trend entry.
- Editorial co-sign: Harper's Bazaar features Paloma Wool sheer.
- Copenhagen FW street style validates everyday sheer styling.
- Minimalist sheer counterpoint to maximalist runway statements.
- Layering optionality empowers personal narrative control.
- 90s icons (Kate Moss, CBK) anchor nostalgic brand alignment.
- Organic cotton: matte, breathable, functional summer sheer.
- Steady full-price demand signals real consumer pull.
- Paris Fashion Week arrival cements brand authority.
- Sheer signature — lingerie fabrics since beginning.
- Modular layering piece for see-through, over, under.
- Coordinated bra set reinforces editorial sheer intent.
- Slider-adjustable straps tweak bust coverage.
- Grey colourway enables tonal layering within brand's palette.
Organic Cotton & Ethical Supply Chain
- Certification
- No GOTS; OEKO-TEX baseline at mill level
- Labor Rights
- EU CSDDD prohibits forced labour in supply chain
- Material Protocol
- Organic cotton part of internal fiber ethics rulebook
- Supply Chain
- Decade-old network of family-run Iberian factories
- Production MOQs
- 50–300 units per run reduce overproduction waste
- Manufacturing Heritage
- Portuguese knit sector focused on quality finishing
- Care Impact
- Machine-washable blend avoids dry cleaning
- Demand Accuracy
- Full-price consistency signals demand‑driven volumes
- Traceability
- Undisclosed factory; regional OEKO-TEX ecosystem trust
- Ethical Cost
- Organic cotton & Portugal mfg lift cost ~30–50%
- Design Longevity
- Timeless cut intended for extended wear per slow fashion
- Marketing Approach
- No paid influencer campaigns; artist-led, trend-resistant
The Insider Community & Anti‑Marketing Mystique
- 800k following without paid influencers; friend/artist casts create insider access
- Artist-led runway and pop-ups (Carlota Guerrero, Isabella Benshimol) give gallery-level cred
- Grainy friend-cast imagery makes each piece feel discovered, not marketed
- Full-price hold across retailers signals exclusivity driven by community desire
- Cult favorite per Who What Wear; priced at Ganni/Toteme tier, valued for editor recognition
- ‘Made in Portugal’ via decade-long family-factory network signals craft ethics
- Adjustable straps and layering versatility offer wearer narrative control and agency
- Quiet sheer stands apart from maximalist runway sheer; for anti-spectacle consumer
- Filmic grey transparency extends founder’s 2014 photographic-memory sweater origin
- Adjustable straps and cropped sheer body function as a silhouette toolkit
- Cropped fitted cut mirrors Copenhagen Fashion Week’s sheer-with-denim street style
- Grey jersey voile embodies brand’s post-2022 shift to subdued, anti-excess refinement
- Organic cotton voile and demand-capped production align with slow-fashion values
- Extends brand’s editor-vetted sheer DNA (Harper’s Bazaar 2024 guide featured Paloma Wool sheer trousers)
- References ’90s icons (Kate Moss, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy); channels pre-social-media sensuality
Deep Research
The sheer and lingerie dressing trend
- The sheer top renaissance draws heavily on 1990s nostalgia — Kate Moss in a transparent slip, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s minimalist separates — and Paloma Wool’s own description of the label as ‘tinged with nostalgia and whimsy’ aligns directly with that era, making this cami feel like a continuation of a heritage of effortless sensuality rather than a fleeting trend piece.
- Vogue UK’s March 2025 assertion that ‘the sheer blouse is the new naked dress’ — cemented by Kate Moss closing Saint Laurent’s show in a transparent top — marks the sheer blouse as the less intimidating heir to the naked dressing trend, making this cami a wearable proxy for a look that dominated red carpets and runways without requiring the same high-wattage confidence.
- WWD’s summer 2025 coverage pinpointed Copenhagen Fashion Week as the inflection point where sheer moved from runway to street, with editors pairing transparent tops with denim and oversized blazers — a styling template that this cami’s minimalist cut is engineered to slot into, bridging the gap between avant-garde and off-duty ease.
- In a trend awash with synthetic sheers, the cami’s organic cotton jersey voile offers a matte finish and breathability that matters when layering in summer heat — exactly the scenario WWD’s 2025 summer sheer report imagines for styling over swimsuits or under blazers during European holidays.
- Rat & Boa’s co-founders told WWD that sheer’s appeal lies in ‘controlling your own narrative,’ a concept Florence Pugh embodied when she defended her 2022 Valentino sheer gown by saying ‘anything sheer is so magical’ — this cami extends that agency into everyday dressing, where the degree of exposure is curated through layering rather than dictated by the garment’s architecture.
- Harper’s Bazaar’s 2024 how-to-wear-sheer guide explicitly featured Paloma Wool’s Brown Silk Archive Trousers, confirming the label’s sheer pieces are on the radar of fashion editors and that this cami extends an existing brand vocabulary rather than a one-off trend play.
- Where Chloé’s fall 2024 sheer blouses went for ’70s glam layering and Valentino’s spring 2025 interpretations leaned into surreal Lynchian drama, the Nasem cami’s lingerie-inspired simplicity — thin straps, rounded neck, cropped fitted cut — channels the Barcelona label’s nostalgia-infused ‘unabashed femininity,’ positioning it as the thoughtful minimalist’s response to sheer maximalism.
Styling the Nasem sheer cami
- “Its transparent fabric aligns perfectly with the Barcelonan label’s fondness for sheer details and layering” is not just marketing copy — it signals that the cami is engineered as a building block for the brand’s signature artful, textural outfits, meaning it is designed to be seen through, over, and under other pieces in ways a typical cami is not.
- A delicate V-shaped stitch at the front center adds directional texture that draws the eye inward and upward, a nuanced alternative to a center seam that elevates the cami from a basic sheer layer to a design piece contributing visual interest even under low necklines or sheer overlays.
- The cami’s edges are finished with a satiny contrast binding that introduces a subtle sheen against the matte sheer jersey, creating a framelike effect that makes the top read as intentional lingerie-inspired outerwear rather than an undergarment mistaken for a top — especially impactful when layered under an open jacket where the silhouette is outlined.
- The existence of a matching bra (sold separately) turns the cami into one half of a coordinated lingerie-as-outerwear look; when worn visibly together, the set echoes the lookbook styling of Paloma Wool collections where sheer and opaque contrasts are embraced as part of the modern luxury aesthetic.
- The nearly translucent 70% organic cotton / 30% polyamide voile is light enough to lie flat under chunky knits without adding bulk yet substantial enough to hold its shape when worn alone as a warm-weather top, making it a true year-round layering piece that functions as a breathable base in winter and an airy standalone in summer.
- The straight, cropped hem falls just below the bust, making the cami proportionally suited for high-waisted trousers, skirts, or denim; the length creates a defined waistline and negative space above the hip that highlights the body’s natural lines and aligns with the brand’s focus on deliberate femininity.
- The thin straps adjust via sliders, allowing the wearer to tweak the neckline depth and the cami’s drape over the bust — lowering the straps elongates the torso and creates a more open canvas for layered necklaces, while shortening them lifts the neckline for a demure, lingerie-peek effect under blazers or cardigans.
- The Grey variant sits within the brand’s signature low-contrast, earthy palette, meaning it integrates seamlessly with other Paloma Wool pieces in dusty rose, ecru, or faded black for a tonal, editorial-inspired look that feels cohesive without overt coordination.
The artistic vision behind Paloma Wool
- The organic cotton jersey voile of this cami aligns with Paloma Wool's internal material rule book that prioritizes organic and recycled fibers and limits production to demand — the same protocol that led the brand to produce leather goods only to order, keeping waste out of the system.
- Sheer, lingerie-derived fabrics are a recurring signature in Paloma Wool's collections, an expression of Lanna's belief that clothes should feel intimate and personal; this cami's ultra-lightweight jersey voile is that philosophy made physical, offering a layer so fine it functions more as a filter for the wearer's own skin tone than as a solid garment.
- Paloma Wool entrusts the creative direction of its runway shows and pop-ups to artists like Carlota Guerrero and Isabella Benshimol, infusing even a simple staple cami with the brand's broader collaborative, art-first sensibility rather than a conventional designer's hand.
- The 'Made in Portugal' stamp on this cami is part of Paloma Wool's ten-year, unchanged supply chain of family-owned factories in Spain and Portugal, a deliberate choice to support local craft and reject the impersonal scale of offshore manufacturing.
- Since its 2022 runway debut at Barcelona's Museum of Contemporary Art, the brand has traded early Instagram-pop boldness for a subdued, sophisticated palette — the cami's grey jersey voile is a clean, minimalist canvas embodying that shift toward 'sophisticated but casual' dressing.
- Lanna frames Paloma Wool as a women-led project dedicated to making wearers feel good in their own bodies; accordingly, this cami's adjustable straps, cropped cut, and sheer fabric are engineered for personal interpretation — backwards, layered, or with the matching bra — giving the wearer control over their own silhouette and exposure.
- Without paid influencer campaigns, Paloma Wool built an 800k-strong Instagram community by casting friends and artists in grainy, unfiltered imagery — so the cami's no-frills design reads as an extension of that communal, anti-commercial visual language, not a marketing-driven product.
- When Paloma Lanna launched Paloma Wool in 2014 by printing her own analog travel photographs onto three sweaters, she set the brand's artistic template: clothing as a vessel for memory and image, an idea this cami's semi-transparent fabric and filmic grey hue continue by treating the body as a screen for shifting light and skin.
Price comparison with similar sheer camis
- Called a 'cult favorite' by Who What Wear and now a Paris Fashion Week brand, Paloma Wool has elevated a simple sheer cami into a statement of IYKYK cool—the Nasem’s $200-275 pricing is aligned with how Ganni or Toteme position their own delicate tops, where editorial credibility forms the backbone of value.
- Even against Lorette's $150 100% silk camisole, the Nasem commands a $125 premium, proving that Paloma Wool's runway presence and cult following allow it to price above natural-fiber hierarchy, where the brand's visual language and piped finishing are the primary value drivers.
- The Nasem cami holds a steady $200-210 USD on Lyst and ModeSens alongside the $275 CAD at Simons, with no systemic discounting visible—a signal that the brand sells through on design desire rather than markdowns, reinforcing the price as a stable brand benchmark.
- At more than 8x the $25 Intimissimi sheer cami, the Nasem occupies an entirely different market tier—the price delta reflects the shift from fast-fashion lounge to a design-brand piece with organic cotton, Portuguese labor, and an art-school aesthetic that functions as a wearable collectible.
- The contrast binding along the neckline and straps, detailed in retailer descriptions, is a labor-intensive lingerie finishing technique that adds cut-and-sew steps compared to a raw hem—it signals an intentional, elevated construction that separates the Nasem from minimalist sheer basics and supports its luxury price.
- Because organic cotton and made-in-Portugal production typically inflate the base cost of a simple top by 30-50% over conventional cotton equivalents produced in Asia, the Nasem's entry-level price point is structurally higher than sub-$50 sheer camis before any design markup is applied.
Portuguese manufacturing quality
- The Ave Valley mills that specialize in organic cotton jersey, like the blend in the Nasem cami, commonly maintain OEKO‑TEX certification as a baseline, providing assurance that the fabric has been tested for harmful substances even if the final garment does not display a certification tag.
- Portuguese production is governed by the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), which legally binds the entire supply chain to prohibitions against forced and child labour — so the cami’s ethical manufacturing claim is backed by statutory enforcement across all subcontractors, not just a voluntary brand policy.
- The cami’s fine jersey voile and lingerie-derived bindings come out of the Porto and Braga textile clusters, where factories have specialized in fine-gauge cotton knits for decades — the same supplier ecosystem that LVMH and Kering luxury houses rely on, so the construction and clean finishes inherit generational expertise rather than fast-fashion shortcuts.
- Portugal’s typical MOQ of 50–300 units allows Paloma Wool to commission small, tightly supervised production runs for each style, meaning this top was likely produced in a limited batch with line-by-line attention that naturally elevates consistency and reduces the quality variance common in high-volume production.
- Under the Portuguese full-package private label model, knitwear factories actively co‑develop fabrics with designers — the cami’s 70% organic cotton / 30% polyamide blend was likely engineered through close iteration to achieve its whisper weight, semi‑sheer drape, and machine‑washable resilience, rather than being selected from a generic stock.
- Edited’s 2024 retail data captured a 28% year‑on‑year increase in premium lines ($200–$600) explicitly marketing European origin — buying the Nasem cami aligns with a market shift where shoppers treat 'Made in Portugal' as a value-added quality signal that rivals traditional 'Made in Italy' prestige at a more accessible price point.
- The Portuguese knitwear industry shed nearly half its factories in the 2000s to eliminate price‑based competitors, survivors pivoting to value‑added services like on‑site design, material innovation, and high‑precision finishing — the Nasem cami benefits from this post‑purge ecosystem where only quality‑oriented manufacturers remain.
Image Analysis
3 images- 01high

Waist-up studio shot of a female model wearing a sheer black cami top with thin brown straps and a beige skirt with silver sequin embellishment at the hem against a light gray background.
sheer black knit fabricthin brown spaghetti strapsscoop neckline with brown bindingstraight hem at topbeige skirt with sequin embellishment at hemscattered circular sequinsfemale model torso and armsshort wavy brown hair (partial)studio plain light gray backgroundsoft even studio lightingwaist-up three quarter crop framing- 02high

Studio shot of a woman wearing a sheer black camisole with thin spaghetti straps and a beige skirt with sequin or bead embellishment along the hem, against a plain white background.
sheer black camisolespaghetti strapsscoop necklinefitted bodicestraight hemsemi-sheer knit fabricbeige skirtsequin or bead embellishment on skirt hemwoman torso and arms visibleplain white studio backgroundeven soft lightingwaist-length topthree-quarter crop framing- 03high

Rear view of a female model wearing a dark brown camisole with thin adjustable straps and a beige skirt with a floral print, photographed against a plain light gray studio background.
female model back viewshort wavy brown hairadjustable thin shoulder strapsmetal strap slidersdark brown camisole topstraight neckline backbeige A-line skirtfloral print on skirt lower halfvisible skin of back and armsstudio plain light gray backgroundsoft even studio lightingside seam on skirt
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Documents & Data
Q&A
6 answered- How translucent is the fabric when worn? Is it intended to be layered or can it be worn alone with nipple coverage?
- The fabric is sheer/translucent and is intended to be layered. The matching bra (sold separately) is designed to be worn underneath for coverage.
- What is the exact length (hem to shoulder) and stretch of the fabric? As a cropped, fitted top, how does it fit on different bust sizes?
- Exact length is not provided, but the top is designed as cropped and fitted. The fabric (70% organic cotton, 30% polyamide) has stretch. For larger bust sizes, consider sizing up for a comfortable fit.
- What are the recommended care instructions for this delicate sheer organic cotton? Is it hand wash only or machine washable?
- The recommended care is dry clean or machine wash cool, and dry flat. This is based on information from a retailer selling the same item.
- What is the range of adjustability on the straps? Can they be fully removed or converted to a halter?
- The straps are adjustable via sliders, but they are not designed to be fully removed or converted into a halter style.
- Is the jersey voile lightweight or medium weight? Does it have any stretch?
- The fabric is lightweight jersey voile, described as 'whisper-weight', and it has stretch due to the organic cotton and polyamide blend.
- What specific factory or region in Portugal? Are there any certifications (e.g., GOTS) for the organic cotton?
- It is made in Portugal, but the specific factory is not disclosed. The organic cotton is not listed with certifications like GOTS on the product page.