º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Sustainable sleepwear business started by friends during pandemic lockdown

Bella Mossman and Ffion Boyesen brought their skills together to found HUNA when they found themselves with so much during the Covid-19 lockdown

Ffion Boyesen (left) and Bella Mossman (right) who have launched a sleepwear brand, HUNA.

Two friends from Ceredigion have turned lockdown stress into business success by setting up a sustainable sleepwear brand.

Such has been the initial reaction the pair are already working on their second collection.

Bella Mossman, 24, and Ffion Boyesen, 25, have known each other since they were born and, despite going to university at different ends of the country, have come together to create HUNA, which translates as slumber in Welsh, a sleepwear brand using handmade and sustainable linen, crafted in Wales.

Ms Mossman and Ms Boyesen started their Llangrannog-based business with the help of Big Ideas Wales, part of Business Wales and funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government. The service is aimed at anyone between the age of 5 and 25 who wants to develop a business idea, including students and graduates.

Talking about how HUNA originated, Ms Mossman said: “After growing frustrated about our own pyjamas, we realised that there was a gap in the market for pyjamas that are designed for a better night’s sleep that also focused on being sustainable and made in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.”

Available to buy on HUNA’s online store, the first collection includes two sleepwear sets; a long sleeve top with full length trousers and a shorts and vest set. The most recent addition to the collection is a bedtime eye mask that is made from the off-cuts of the natural linen and biodegradable eco elastic, along with dead-stock black silk and hand knitted wool, in a further effort to be sustainable. The collections starts from £35.

Growing up in rural Wales, the young entrepreneurs wanted their Welsh roots to be at the heart of the business by sourcing all the materials as close to home as possible and using local craftsmanship to make all of their products.

Ms Boyesen said: “Incorporating sustainability into every aspect of the business, from the fabric and elastic to the biodegradable packaging, has been a priority for us from the start. We are proud to call Wales our home so we wanted to keep all elements of the product as local as possible, even our labels are 100% organic and come from a company in South Wales.”