From biodynamic farms to the iconic little green tube, here are ten things I love about Weleda.
Some brands you stock. Others you grow up alongside in business. Weleda is the second kind for me. They first knocked on my door back in 2014, at my very first warehouse in Frenchs Forest (this photo was taken that day). Funnily enough, my warehouse is now in Warriewood, right next door to them. More than a decade on, we're practically neighbours. Here's the thing about Weleda though. They've been making natural skincare since 1921, which makes them one of the original toxin-free brands, long before "toxin-free" was a phrase anyone used. They grow, harvest and process their own botanicals, and more than 100 years on, the founding principles behind their very first formulas still apply to every product they release.
So these are 10 things I love about Weleda. And let me tell you, narrowing it down to 10 was the hard part.
Weleda have been making natural skincare since 1921, which makes them one of the original toxin-free brands. They grow, harvest and process their own botanicals, and more than 100 years on, the founding principles behind their very first formulas still apply to every product they release.
And let me tell you, narrowing it down to 10 was the hard part.
1. A rich heritage dating back to the 1920s
It all started in 1921, in Switzerland, with a philosopher, a physician and a chemist: Rudolf Steiner, Dr Ita Wegman and Oskar Schmiedel. What began as a small pharmaceutical laboratory and hospital grew into a skincare brand, with their whole approach coming straight out of their work in natural medicine. The botanical research that shaped those first formulas is the same foundation their products are built on today.
The most iconic example? The Weleda Skin Food, first created in 1926. And yes, that makes this year Skin Food's 100th birthday.
2. The signature Phyto-Infusion blend of botanicals
The original Weleda Skin Food is built on a Phyto-Infusion blend of four plant extracts: calendula, chamomile, rosemary and wild pansy. It's the same blend they've used from the start, and you'll find it across every Skin Food product today, including the latest face care range. If you haven't tried that one yet, you're in for a treat. I wrote all about their Skin Food Super Serum here.
3. Based on Anthroposophic medicine
Weleda produces both natural skincare and anthroposophic medicines, with a long-standing pharmaceutical heritage. Anthroposophic medicine is a holistic approach to health that works with the body as a whole, rather than focusing on isolated symptoms, using plant, mineral and metal-based ingredients. This philosophy runs through how Weleda develops its products, from the way ingredients are grown to how the formulas are created. It's part of what makes them feel so special.
4. Rudolf Steiner developed biodynamic farming
Steiner didn't just practise biodynamic farming, he developed it. In 1924 he delivered the Agriculture Course at Koberwitz, which became the foundation of biodynamic farming and the organic agriculture movement. Biodynamic farming treats the farm as a self-contained ecosystem, using plant-based preparations to build soil health and timing the harvest to natural cycles. Weleda has practised biodynamic farming since its founding, and many of the plants used across their formulations, including those in the signature Phyto-Infusion blend, are grown using these methods.
5. One of the largest biodynamic medicinal gardens in Europe
Their main garden in Germany covers 57 acres and is one of the largest biodynamic medicinal plant gardens in Europe. They grow 260 plant species biodynamically there, with 180 of those used directly in their products. They also operate eight Weleda gardens worldwide across Europe, South America and New Zealand to source specific plants in their native environments. The Weleda Birch Cellulite Oil is a good example of this. Young birch leaves are harvested in spring when their concentration of flavonoids, saponins and tannins is at its highest. These leaves are sourced both from Weleda's own biodynamic gardens and through long-standing fair-trade partnerships, primarily in the Czech Republic. If you want to know more, I wrote this guide to birch for skin and cellulite.
6. Plants are processed immediately after harvest
Weleda farmers hand-select blossoms, leaves and roots at peak potency, and these plants go from field to processing within hours to preserve their active compounds. The fresh plant material is then combined with organic alcohol or pure spring water to create the tinctures that form the base of their products. Calendula is one of the best examples of this. The freshly harvested flowers used in the Weleda Calendula Baby Oil are processed soon after harvest, using alcohol to help extract and preserve the plant's natural compounds before being blended into the final formulation.
7. They use the whole plant, not isolated compounds
Weleda processes around 1,000 natural raw materials across their three production sites. They release the properties of each plant through grinding, cutting or squeezing, rather than isolating single compounds. This is very different to how many mainstream cosmetic brands formulate, where individual actives are extracted in a lab and the rest of the plant goes to waste.
8. It was one of the brands that helped shape my early store
Weleda was one of the early brands I stocked when I was building my business back in 2012, and it quickly became one of my best sellers. Back then, hardly anyone was focused on natural beauty, so it was a natural fit from the very beginning. Here's what I find interesting. My best sellers from back then are still my best sellers today. They tend to be Weleda's hidden gems, the ones loyal customers swear by: the Hair Tonic, the White Mallow Face Cream, the Birch Oil and the Salt Toothpaste.
9. One of the first brands certified by the UEBT
Weleda is one of the first brands worldwide to hold the Union for Ethical Biotrade (UEBT) Sourcing with Respect certification. This confirms their entire supply chain meets high standards for biodiversity and fair treatment of farming communities, covering not just their own gardens but every ingredient sourced from global partners.
10. Weleda co-founded the NATRUE certification
In 2007, Weleda and a group of European organic cosmetics companies co-founded NATRUE as a non-profit. NATRUE is now one of the most rigorous international standards for natural and organic cosmetics globally. All Weleda products carry the NATRUE certification, and the entire range is certified natural or organic. When you look at Weleda as a whole, it's not one product or even one range that stands out, it's how everything connects. From the way their ingredients are grown and processed to the philosophy behind each formula, it all traces back to the same foundations they started with over 100 years ago. That's what makes Weleda stand out, and it's why I've been stocking them for over a decade.
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