Tallow + shea body butter

The jar you reach for when your skin feels over it.

For skin that feels dry, brittle, flaky, tight after well water, rough after outdoor work, or tired of lotions that feel good for twenty minutes and then vanish.

Wild and Soft jar front
Texture ritual

Dense in the jar. Silky when it melts.

The butter starts rich because it is meant to. Warm a tiny amount between your palms and it turns into a smooth, cushiony layer that spreads best over slightly damp skin. Use less than you would use with lotion; let the melt do the work.

Scoop small.
Start with less than you think. A pea-sized amount can cover a dry zone once warmed.
Warm until glossy.
Rub between your hands for a few seconds so the butter relaxes before it touches skin.
Press into damp skin.
After a warm shower, handwash, or rinse, pat skin so it is barely damp, then apply.
Target the rough spots.
Knuckles, elbows, knees, shins, heels, feet, and forearms are where this formula shines.
Built for

Real-life skin, not shelf decoration.

The product looks calm on a counter, but the use case is practical: long days, dry air, frequent washing, hard-working hands, and skin that wants a richer layer.

Outdoor days

Use after dirt, wind, gloves, grass, tools, cold mornings, and the extra handwashing that comes with outside work.

Well-water homes

Apply right after washing while skin is slightly damp, especially when water leaves that tight, filmy feeling.

Night repair-feeling ritual

Coat dry hands and feet before bed, add socks if needed, and wake up to a softer-feeling finish.

Cold-weather bodies

Use on shins, elbows, knees, and arms when winter air makes skin feel papery or rough.

Minimalist counters

Choose one rich body butter instead of a drawer full of products that never become the one you reach for.

Gift-worthy softness

The jar feels elevated, the texture feels memorable, and the ritual feels personal without being complicated.

What is inside

Few ingredients, clear jobs.

Grass-fed tallow brings cushion. Raw shea brings creaminess. Jojoba improves glide. Arrowroot softens the finish. Vitamin E supports oil freshness. Scent should stay optional because sensitive skin deserves a calmer choice.

4 oz | 113 g

Use: Body-first moisturizer for dry-feeling skin.

Best time: After bathing, after handwashing, after outdoor work, or before bed.

Finish: Rich, slow-melting, soft, protective-feeling.

Boundary: Not sunscreen. Not a drug. Not a treatment for eczema, acne, psoriasis, wounds, infection, or any medical condition.

Product questions

Everything you should know before the first scoop.

Can you use Wild & Soft on your face?

The safest positioning is body-first. Some people may tolerate rich tallow products on facial dry patches, but acne-prone, oily, rosacea-prone, or highly sensitive facial skin should be cautious. Patch test and use a tiny amount before trying it on your face.

Is it good for eczema or psoriasis?

Those are medical conditions. Moisturizers can be part of comfort routines for dry-feeling skin, but this body butter is not a treatment, cure, or flare plan. Active flares, open skin, bleeding, infection signs, severe itch, or pain need a clinician.

Will it feel greasy?

Too much can feel greasy because this is an anhydrous butter, not a light lotion. Use a smaller scoop, warm it fully, apply to slightly damp skin, and give it a few minutes to settle.

Does it smell like beef?

Quality rendering, filtering, and careful blending should keep the aroma soft and cosmetic-friendly. Tallow is still a real ingredient, so “absolutely no natural scent ever” is not the honest promise. The goal is clean, mild, and pleasant.

Who should skip it?

Skip or ask a clinician first if you react to animal-derived ingredients, have known beef allergy concerns, have broken or infected skin, need a vegan product, or are shopping for an SPF or medical treatment.