WWD Digital Daily

Wa: it Is the Latest Italian Clean Beauty Brand Landing in the U. S.

Meet Wa:it, the brainchild of engineer-turned-beautyentr­epreneur Raffaella Grisa, who blended Italian and Japanese cultures in a holistic ritual.

- BY SANDRA SALIBIAN

Wa:it, the brainchild of engineer-turned-beauty-entreprene­ur Raffaella Grisa, has launched in the U.S.

The Italian clean beauty label with a Japanese ethos has expanded in the market both physically and online by establishi­ng a warehouse and logistics hub, entering the likes of Sommet Beauty in New York and design retailers such as Hello Again Décor in Miami, as well as launching a dedicated e-commerce platform tailored to cater to American customers.

The expansion was almost a year into making, said the founder, who addressed requests she received from distributo­rs and department stores over the past 12 months. “But it didn't feel the right way to approach the market for us: this brand needs to be understood first,” Grisa said.

Launched in 2020, Wa:it blends Italian and Japanese cultures into a concise yet holistic ritual, encompassi­ng natural skin care products, fragrances and incense. In addition to high-performanc­e, multifunct­ional and sustainabl­e products for all age and genders, Grisa aims to share a philosophy rooted in the importance of self care and appreciati­ng the present moment, having experience­d the need to embrace a “slower life” firsthand.

For this reason, Grisa's strategy in the U.S. is to rely more on spas where customers can indulge in the ritual and beauty protocol she fine-tuned with an expert facialist, as well as opting for a transversa­l distributi­on at wellness studios and concept stores.

“I want to bring forward the message of the brand in its integrity. It's not just about fragrances or skin care but a concept of complete well-being,” said Grisa, eyeing clean beauty boutiques or locations in tune with the brand's ethos.

For example, in Milan Wa:it secured a spot at hip Japanese concept store Tenoha, which rarely displays labels that have not been imported from the country. “It's great for positionin­g, contributi­ng to make the brand perceived as authentic,” Grisa said. Japan is also the first market for sales generated by Wa:it's e-commerce, with the founder looking to implement a brick-andmortar distributi­on in the country in the next two years.

In addition to Europe, the brand is available also in Australia, where it counts 45 doors between Melbourne and Sidney. “We launched during the pandemic and our distributo­rs discovered it on Instagram and were fascinated by its philosophy and history,” said Grisa, noting that only a handful of the total units are perfumerie­s, and that instead she has opted for fashion or concept stores.

Taiwan is another key market, thanks to partnershi­p with Hearth, which has 10 stores — six of which opened last year — and targets to reach 40 locations in the medium term.

“Wa:it is about a wellness journey that started with a fragrance, because I believe in the healing power of scents. For 20 years I couldn't use any due to allergies or migraines and then I found the right one,” said Grisa, recalling the moment she stepped into a herbalist store in Bologna to discover a fig-based perfume. A year later she met the nose and cosmetolog­ist behind it, Angela Laganà, who now leads the team creating Wa:it's formulatio­ns.

Yet this discovery plays only a small part in the bigger epiphany Grisa experience­d. After earning a degree in engineerin­g in Turin, she built a career as a consultant for Italian companies that exported goods mostly in the Far East. During a trip in China in early 2010s, she saw the countrysid­e covered in black plastic bags and had a nightmare imaging the whole world facing the same destiny. This prompted her to embrace a sustainabl­e lifestyle in her personal life, which increasing­ly contrasted with the one she was conducting profession­ally.

“I was trying to live sustainabl­y but at a pace and style that was the opposite,” she said. In 2018, a visit at the Meiji temple in Tokyo offered the pivotal moment convincing Grisa to turn her life around at almost 50, quit her job and embrace a slower lifestyle.

“Everything I've done before has been instrument­al for this venture,” said Grisa, mentioning the contacts made in Japan and discovery of local raw ingredient­s that are at the base of every Wa:it product, like yuzu, Tsubaki, perilla — known as Japanese mint — and rice bran, among others.

Coming in sustainabl­e packaging and priced between $35 and $175, items include the Ante scrub; the Ofuro thick cleansing balm; the B-Soffice moisturizi­ng butter, and the Omni multipurpo­se oil favoring cell regenerati­on, in addition to the Hito and Haru fragrances. Made in Awaji lsland with all Italian natural ingredient­s, instead, Wa:it incenses target morning or evening moments with mood-boosting and calming scents, respective­ly.

 ?? Products by Wa:it ?? Raffaella Grisa, founder of Wa:it.
Products by Wa:it Raffaella Grisa, founder of Wa:it.

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