WASI Seaweed Soap is designed to cleanse + purify + refresh your skin.
Handmade in Cork using hand-harvested Irish seaweed, this all-natural soap has quickly become a daily essential for many — with customers saying it’s the only product they now keep in the shower.
Blended with purifying cedarwood and uplifting lemongrass essential oils, this vegan soap offers a gentle yet effective cleanse without drying the skin. The lemongrass not only adds a refreshing citrus scent but also brings natural antiseptic and antibacterial properties, helping to refine and brighten dull skin.
Made with skin-loving vegetable-based ingredients, it’s suitable for both face and body — and gentle enough for daily use.
Key Benefits:
Cleanses and purifies without stripping moisture
Infused with antioxidant-rich seaweed
Naturally antibacterial and refreshing
100% vegan and free from synthetic additives
Handmade in small batches in West Cork
A refreshing alternative to conventional shower gels and shampoos — just pure seaweed goodness in every bar.
WASI Eco- Friendly Irish Seaweed Soap
About WASI
WASI is a small-batch, seaweed-based skincare brand rooted in the wild Atlantic coast of Southwest Ireland. Founded by a couple deeply connected to land and sea, WASI brings ancient coastal traditions into the modern skincare ritual.
Raised on a family farm outside Bantry, founder Sinéad grew up using seaweed to nourish both soil and skin — a practice passed down through generations. Her partner Eli, a lifelong fisherman and sea-lover, brings his deep knowledge of the tides and coastlines to the heart of WASI’s harvesting practices.
Together, they handcraft each product in small batches using sustainably hand-harvested seaweed and the finest natural ingredients. With deep respect for nature’s rhythms, they cut only what the ocean offers, allowing seaweed to fully regenerate — ensuring this powerful marine plant thrives for generations to come.
WASI is more than skincare. It’s a return to the wisdom of the sea, bottled with care on the shores of West Cork.




