Made by hand on Ynys Môn · 100% natural, vegan-friendly · Halen y môr a gwymon — sea salt & seaweed
Wild Môn Bath & Body · Ynys Môn
Hands cradling an amber jar of bath salts in the sun

Dirion ynys dedwydd draethau

Ynys Môn · Anglesey

Made of salt, seaweed and sea air.

Natural bath and body from a Welsh island — the skincare sister to Halen Môn sea salt. Gathered by hand, 100% natural, vegan-friendly.

From the same shore as Halen Môn

A small island, distilled into a jar.

Wild Môn is made on Ynys Môn, the island the Welsh call the Mother of Wales. We take the sea salt our sister company Halen Môn draws from the Menai Strait, add hand-harvested seaweed and a short list of plant oils, and make slowly — in the batches the island allows.

100%natural ingredients
Veganfriendly, never tested on animals
Ynys Mônmade on Anglesey, Wales
A bar of Halen Môn cold-process soap embossed with the maker's mark

A few to begin with

The shelf

All products

Y casgliad cyflawn

The full collection

Cold-process soaps coloured by seaweed and indigo

Stori · The story

Why seaweed?

Long before the word skincare, the people of Ynys Môn waded into the shallows at low tide and came back with armfuls of seaweed. They knew what we are only now relearning — that the sea mends what the weather wears down.

Swatches of gel, balm and salt scrub

Mineral-dense

A larder of minerals.

Anglesey seaweed is unusually rich in iodine, magnesium, calcium and the trace minerals skin loses to hard water and cold air. Steeped in a hot bath, it releases its oils and softens the water around you.

We harvest Fucus serratus by hand, dry it whole, and box it without additives. Nothing is done to it that the tide doesn’t already do.

Hands holding a banded beach stone

Gathered by hand

Taken gently, left to grow.

We cut only the fronds and leave the holdfast, so the same beds return year after year. It is slow, cold, low-tide work — and the reason our Wild Seaweed Bath smells of the actual sea, not an idea of it.

Wild Seaweed Bath-in-a-Box

“The sea, brought indoors — and asked to stay a while.”

How to bathe

Three slow steps

Steep

Run a hot bath and lower the dried seaweed in. Wait — five, ten minutes — until the water softens and turns the colour of a rockpool.

Soak

Climb in while it’s warm. The fronds release a fine, natural oil that coats the skin. Stay as long as the water allows.

Settle

Pat dry, don’t rinse, and let the minerals keep working. Follow with Sailor’s Healing Balm where skin is weathered.

From the sea

Shop the ritual

Sleep & rest