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Best cooling sheets, pillows and mattresses to keep you sweat-free this summer

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LINEN DUVET COVER SET

Magic Linen


With summer on the horizon, it’s important to have several methods of staying cool, even at night. While ceiling fans and air conditioners can help generate a cool breeze and some sleep-inducing white noise, they might feel worthless if you’re tossing and turning under sheets and blankets that don’t breathe. 

The shopping experts at CBS Essentials have discovered the best cooling sheets, pillows and even cooling mattress options to help you sleep comfortably all summer long. 

All of these top-rated bedding essentials have a four-star rating or higher and include tons of positive customer reviews. Some are even on sale now.

Keep cool with these airy sheets, pillows and mattresses designed to regulate your temperature while you sleep. These breathable finds from PurpleNight, Tempur-Pedic and more are made with fabrics that help keep sweat at bay. While we’ve found tons of discounts, you may find that many of these must-have bedding essentials are worth the splurge for a good night’s sleep.

Note that all prices listed are for queen-size items, prices vary by size.

	

Best cooling sheets and bedding for the summer

Stay cool throughout the long summer nights with these breathable cooling sheets and bedding options.

Purple SoftStretch sheet set

purple-sheets.jpg

Purple


These 4.6-star-rated Purple sheets are made with bamboo to help promote a cool night’s sleep. These moisture-wicking, breathable sheets adapt to the body for ultimate support. The high-quality fabric is built to last so the sheets can stay their best no matter how often you wash them.

Choose from six colors. Get it for $183 (regularly $229).


	

CGK Unlimited sheet set

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Amazon


This cooling sheet set is being offered on Amazon at a great price point, making it a cost-effective option to beat the summer heat. The four-piece set includes a flat sheet, a fitted sheet with deep pockets and two pillowcases.

We love that this sheet set is available in 45 different colorways, so you’re sure to find something to match your bedroom decor. Made from high-quality brushed microfiber, the fabric is incredibly soft, breathable and cooling. 

Prices vary by size and color with queen sheet sets starting at just $30.


Cozy Earth bamboo sheet set

Cozy Earth Bamboo sheet set

Cozy Earth


These breathable sheets are perfect for staying cool this summer. The sheets are made from 100% premium viscose from bamboo and offer a cozy, oversized fit. The cooling sheet set includes a top sheet, a fitted sheet and two pillowcases.

This set was previously seen on Oprah’s Favorite Things list. Prices vary by size.

Get it for $311 at Cozy Earth (regularly $389). 


Brooklinen linen core sheet set

brooklinen linen sheets

Brooklinen


The linen version of Brooklinen’s core sheet set is an excellent choice for summer. Made from 100% European flax, these light, airy sheets are cooler than cotton to help you avoid overheating at night. The set includes one fitted sheet, one flat sheet and two pillowcases.

“I’m in love with these sheets,” says one Brooklinen reviewer. “I’m a very hot sleeper and usually wake up sweaty, but not with these sheets. You know that amazing feeling when you flip your pillow over for the cool side? Well, that’s what these sheets feel like all the time.”

Get this sheet set for $259 while it’s on sale at Brooklinen (regularly $299). 


Casper Hybrid pillow with Snow Technology

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Casper


Casper’s new Hybrid pillow with Snow Technology is made with a foam and fiber design and features the brand’s Heat Delete bands for 12 hours of cooling. It’s outfitted with a Casper CoolTouch cover for a refreshing sensation.

“I’m very impressed with this pillow’s cooling abilities,” says CBS Essentials senior writer Lily Rose. “I sleep fairly hot. This pillow’s cooling tech really does last all night and feels so soothing on my head and neck, where I tend to get sweatiest. I also found the pillow to be incredibly supportive and comfortable. Pro tip — this cooling pillow also feels amazing if you sleep with it between your knees.” 

Choose from standard and king sizes. 

This pillow is just $134 right now (regularly $149). 


Night DualSilk washable pillowcase

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Night


Each side of this pillowcase has something different to offer. One side is made of 100% mulberry silk, which absorbs less of your skincare for maximum hydration. The other side is 100% eucalyptus, which wicks excess moisture and allows hair and skin to breathe. No matter what side you choose, you’ll sleep cool and comfortable this summer. 

The Night DualSilk washable pillowcase, available in white, champagne and gunmetal, is $60 for full/queen and $70 for king size. 


Luna cooling weighted blanket

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Amazon


Weighted blankets provide enhanced comfort and are associated with better sleep. The Luna weighted blanket is made with high-quality, breathable cotton and premium glass beads. This cooling weighted blanket is available in full, queen and king sizes. Prices vary by size, weight and color.

This cooling blanket is $94 with an additional 20% off coupon at Amazon now. 


Tempur-Cloud Breeze dual cooling pillow

TEMPUR-Cloud Breeze Dual Cooling Pillow

Tempur-Pedic


Don’t just look for a cooling pillowcase — your pillow can be cooling too. This special pillow has a Tempur-Breeze gel layer on both sides to help keep you cool. The Tempur-Pedic pillow has a breathable 100% cotton cover (removable and washable) and comes in king and queen sizes. It’s designed to support all sleeping positions: back, stomach and side.

Right now Tempur-Pedic is offering a bundle deal on the Tempur-Cloud Breeze cooling pillow. You can get one queen-size pillow for $199, or two for $259. King-sized pillows are $239 each, or two for $309.


Layla Sleep Kapok cooling pillow

Layla Kapok Pillow

Amazon


These adjustable fill pillows are made from fibers found in the seed pods of kapok trees. The eco-friendly material is light and airy but still effectively supports your head and neck.

Amazon reviewers like how the pillow is adjustable, and that it comes with a bag for storing the memory foam and kapok when your pillow needs a washing. It’s recommended for all sleepers, no matter your preferred sleeping position.

You can get a single pillow (full/queen) on Amazon for $109, or get a set of two for $164.


Best cooling mattresses for hot sleepers

What’s even better than cooling sheets? A cooling mattress. Check out this ultra-cool memory foam mattress.

Casper Snow mattress

snow-mattress.jpg

Casper


Casper makes a mattress the brand claims will keep you up to five degrees cooler all night long. The Casper Snow mattress uses the brand’s Snow Technology combined with Casper’s HeatDelete Bands, Phase Change Material and a CoolTouch Cover to keep you cool while you sleep. It features three ergonomic zones to provide support and spinal alignment.

Choose from five sizes. Get it on sale now for just $1,745 (regularly $2,495).


Brooklyn Bedding Brooklyn Chill Memory Foam

brooklyn chill memory foam mattress

Brooklyn Bedding


The Brooklyn Chill mattress is made of a cooling gel swirl memory foam. The open-cell technology in each foam layer claims to provide increased airflow and breathability. This cooling mattress comes in a large range of sizes.

Get it for just $393 at Brooklyn Bedding (regularly $524).




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U.S. Marines, Japanese and Australian troops will train together amid heightened concerns over China

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U.S. Marines will take part in joint training with Japanese and Australian forces in northern Australia, the three countries’ defense ministers announced Sunday as they expressed concern about a spate of confrontations with China’s increasingly assertive military.

Australia’s acting Prime Minister Richard Marles hosted U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Japanese Defense Minister Nakatani Gen for talks in Darwin, Australia.

The trilateral amphibious training between Australia, Japan and the U.S. Marine rotational force in northern Australia will begin in 2025 with Exercise Talisman Sabre. Australia will also join Exercise Orient Shield in Japan for the first time next year.

“Recognizing the critical role the trilateral partnership plays to uphold regional stability, we commit to trilateral policy coordination and to consult each other on regional security issues and contingencies,” they said in a joint statement.

In their statement, the three defense ministers reiterated “serious concern” about destabilizing actions in the East and South China seas including “dangerous conduct” by the Chinese military against Philippine and other vessels from the region. China claims the South China Sea almost in its entirety.

“We reiterate our strong opposition to any unilateral attempts to change the status quo by force or coercion,” they said, adding that it is “important that all states are free to exercise rights and freedoms consistent with international law.”

The ministers also urged the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its own territory and has stepped up military harassment with frequent drills around the island.

Marles, who is also Australia’s defense minister, said following talks with his Japanese counterpart in September that both nations looked to ways to build greater familiarity between their forces. One of the “obvious opportunities” was for Japan to participate in activities during the U.S. Marine rotation in Australia, he said Sunday.

“Having a more forward-leaning opportunity for greater training with Japan and the U.S. together is a really fantastic opportunity,” he said.

Asked if the increased military cooperation would anger Beijing, Marles said the decision was about building “the best relationships possible with like-minded countries, with our friends and with our allies.”



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Photographing the rooms of kids killed in school shootings

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An unmade bed

A library book 12 years overdue

The next day’s outfit

Notes to her future self

Click on the door to enter



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How do you make a portrait of a child who isn’t there? Photographer Lou Bopp found a way, but it wasn’t easy.

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In early 2018, I was deplaning after an 18-hour flight when Steve Hartman called. He had an idea: to photograph the still-intact bedrooms of kids who had been killed in school shootings. 

It’s a headful. And six years later, I still don’t have an “elevator pitch” for the project — but then, I don’t often talk about this project. It is by far the most difficult I have ever worked on.

When Steve, my friend of about 25 years, asked me if I would like to be involved, I said yes without hesitation — even though I didn’t think we would get any families to agree. There is no way that I would have said no to partnering with him on this.

Emotionally, I was not sure how I would get through it. Within a few months I was on my way to Parkland, Florida. Alone. I’m not sure that I realized that I would be on my own. 

But here I was. An on-location commercial photographer who focuses on people and pets to create compelling, honest, textural and connective moments for large brands, per my LinkedIn professional profile, on a project where there is no one to take photos of — for the most brutal of reasons. 

How do you make a portrait of a child who is not there?

In each of these children’s rooms — the most sacred of places for these families — there was the sense that the child had just been there, and was coming right back. It was as if they’d just left their room like that when they went to school in the morning and were returning in the afternoon. 

I wanted to capture that essence.

Most kids’ bedrooms are their very own special places, and these were no different. I looked everywhere, without touching anything. I photographed inside trash cans, under beds, behind desks. Their personalities shone through in the smallest of details — hair ties on a doorknob, a toothpaste tube left uncapped, a ripped ticket for a school event — allowing me to uncover glimpses as to who they were. 

But there was an emotional challenge in addition to that creative one. Over the course of more than six years, we visited with many families around the country. The parents I spoke with seemed grateful that I was there. But each time I received a call or text from Steve about a new family, my heart sank. 

It meant another family had lost a child.

I find it unfathomable that children being killed at school is even an issue. It makes no sense. It’s impossible to process. The night prior to each one of the family visits, I didn’t sleep. And I knew I wouldn’t going into the project. It’s not a self-fulfilling prophecy. It is nerves. And empathy. And sorrow. And fear. 

In my notes from early on in the project, back in 2018, writing in seat 6H on the flight back from Nairobi, I reflected on the emotional task ahead.

“This is going to be one of the most difficult things ever, emotionally, for me, and not just work related. As I read my research documents, I get visibly emotional,” I wrote, noting my gratitude that the dark cabin prevented the other passengers from seeing me.

The prospect brought my own fears to the fore, both for myself — “I can’t help thinking about Rose,” my daughter, “and what if. I’ve lost sleep over envisioning the what-ifs well before Parkland” — and about and for meeting the families in the project: “When I read about April & Phillip and Lori’s plight, I somehow, for some reason put myself in their emotional position even though that is impossible, I have no idea, it’s beyond comprehension, I do not know what they feel. I do not know what I am going to say to them, I’m scared beyond belief. And alone.”

But just days later, I was photographing the first assignment for the project: Alyssa Alhadeff’s room. She was just 14 years old when she walked out of that room to head to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. I was shaky meeting the family friend who greeted me at the house. Her daughter was Alyssa’s best friend, and a photo of the two girls was on the table.

According to my notes, “The room was a beautiful teenager’s messy room. My emotions were kept in check the way that they usually are; By hiding behind the camera. I removed my shoes before entering. My heart was pounding and it reverberated through my body and soul, I felt like I was in one of the most sacred and special places on Earth. I was so careful not to touch anything.”

I left feeling ready to explode in sadness and anger.

Later that day, I photographed Carmen Schentrup’s room. Her younger sister had survived the Parkland shooting, but 16-year-old Carmen was killed in her AP Psychology class. Meeting her parents, April and Phillip, was what I was most scared of. 

“I feel so much pain and compassion for them and I don’t want to say the wrong thing, drop cliches etc.,” I wrote at the time. “I spoke to Steve for guidance. He said, just be you. That’s all I can do. Just be me. He was right, those three words helped carry me through this entire project. Just be me.”

April let me in, and I worked quickly, only meeting Phillip as I was leaving. “The conversation felt like we all three were just trying to hold it together. I cannot imagine what they are going through, my heart hurts for them. This was / is such a painful project, and reconciling it will be impossible.

“I think about how anything can happen at any time to any of us. Literally. You never know,” I wrote.

After only about 16 hours on the ground in Florida, I was done with the first portion. I felt the project was a must, but I also dreaded the next call from Steve about the next family. I didn’t know when that call would come — many years later, or the very next day, possibly never. 

But last month, we — and the documentary crew that filmed us working — completed this project. While I haven’t seen it yet, I know Steve’s piece won’t be a typical Steve Hartman segment. How could it be? I know he struggled too, and we both have spent a lot of time processing this. 

I remember one August evening, I was devastated as I left the home of one of the families. Within minutes, I passed an ice cream shop crowded with other families — seemingly carefree, full of joy and laughter. The juxtaposition, mere minutes apart, cracked my soul.

I hope some way, somehow, this project can facilitate change — the only possible positive outcome for this I could comprehend. After the news cycle ends, these families will still be living with an incomprehensible nightmare.



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