Somerset: The Unexpected Epicentre of Indie Beauty and Wellness
Somerset: Indie Beauty and Wellness Epicentre

With its orchards, fruit farms, and willow withies, Somerset is a place where cider once served as currency and folklore still permeates daily life. Shaped by the fertile Somerset Levels, ancient drovers' roads, and a culture rooted in making, growing, and seasonality, the county has managed to embrace its recent fashionable reinvention without losing its identity. This is also where I grew up, which may explain why I have particularly enjoyed watching a steady stream of beauty and wellness brands emerge from the region.

To be clear, this is not Somerset transforming into the new Cotswolds, with glossy products arriving to accessorize country living. These brands have built distinctly regional yet thoroughly modern identities grounded in craft, botany, and a slower pace of life.

The Blueprint: Cowshed

We should start with Cowshed because, long before wellness became about optimization and Steven Bartlett lamenting a glass of wine, it was providing feel-good self-care from an actual cow shed. Founded in 1998 at Babington House near Frome, the concept grew from ingredients found in the estate's walled garden. It was wholesome, feel-good, and unpretentious — this was the 1990s, after all.

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Nearly three decades later, the brand has undergone a relaunch, placing renewed emphasis on its roots after a successful global tour via Soho House bathrooms. The Somerset spirit remains, even if the formulas and sustainability credentials have evolved. Cowshed may have expanded, but it continues to work with a fragrance house just 10 miles down the road from Babington.

Try: The Refresh collection, scented with bergamot, lemongrass, and grapefruit (from £12, Cowshed.com). Top Somerset tip: “Vobster Quay – a beautiful swimming lake a mile from Babington House,” says Kat Kerrigan, Cowshed’s brand manager.

The Alchemists: Ffern

Founded in 2018 by siblings Owen Mears and Emily Cameron, botanical fragrance house Ffern was shaped by a childhood spent next to a biodynamic herb farm on Exmoor and a shared commitment to restoring perfumery to its artisanal roots. The brand releases four fragrances a year, one for each season. Available to members of its ledger (and visitors to its London store), they feel tied to a place, a time, and nature’s rhythms.

Ffern’s world is steeped in local mythology. “It’s the land of King Arthur, of the Green Man, stone circles, and ancient woodlands,” says Cameron. “Growing up, we were fascinated by craft, nature, and folklore – Ffern is where these ideas come together.”

Try: Summer 26, a citrus floral layered with clementine, rose, basil, and blackcurrant bud (£89, from June 21, Ffern.co). Top Somerset tip: “I love the Three Horseshoes in Batcombe. Their cider list is amazing,” says Cameron.

The Aesthetes: Commune

The brainchild of Kate Neal and Rémi Paringaux, Bruton-based Commune launched in 2022 with a natural self-care line approached through a design lens. Its beautiful aluminium bottles are cult objects among those in the know, while the brand has secured spots in the chicest homes and hospitality spaces, including Estelle Manor.

“We take our cues from English folklore and the Somerset landscape,” says Neal. “This feeds everything from scent profiles to the gothic lettering on our bottles.”

Try: The Seymour hand wash and hand cream duo, guaranteed to make every sink look better and every hand smell like Somerset in spring (£120, Commune.cc). Top Somerset tip: “Go to Chalice Well in Glastonbury on a spring morning. Fill a bottle from the Lion’s Head fountain and soak up the stillness,” says Neal.

The Formulators: Foundry

Foundry designs and makes hardworking, luxurious, problem-solving skin and bodycare from a Saxon water mill near Frome. Founded by cosmetic formulator and perfumer John Kilroy, the brand combines serious science with ingredients gathered from the surrounding countryside. “We call this approach wild science,” says Kilroy. “This gives us the technical edge that small companies traditionally struggle to achieve, alongside a small-batch, wild-crafted quality that big companies can’t scale.”

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Twice a year, Foundry harvests local spring blossoms, field flowers, autumn berries, and fruits, transforming them into the extracts, ferments, and active ingredients used in its formulas.

Try: Biome serum, a sophisticated formula designed to strengthen skin health (£120, Foundryformulas.co.uk). Top Somerset tip: “The beer and pop-up food nights at Westcombe Dairy near Bruton. They’re very local, very small, and very good,” says Kilroy.