Chronicle

Graydon Moffat ’84 turned her culinary and design talents into Graydon Skincare, a sustainable superfood skincare brand that uses pioneering biotechnology to ensure we have good skin days, every day.

Graydon Moffat

Written by Julia (Stanley) Weaver ’78
Photography by Kayla Rocca

616 Words
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Left: Supermoon Serum, a multifunctional hydrating water serum with bio-retinol and peptides.

Right: Face Food Mineral Mist, a 2-in-1 pick-me-up acts as both a toner and a hydrating face mist.

graydonskincare.ca

Graydon moved back to Toronto and worked in marketing at Nestle and Nabisco. The amount of packaging waste in manufacturing and increasing consumption bothered her. This fueled her interest in sustainability. While Graydon appreciated the knowledge she had gained in a corporate environment, she decided to jump at the opportunity to participate in Toronto’s first 2-year yoga teacher training certification program and pursue a different path.

“I had a lightbulb moment. With my culinary, design, and marketing skills, I should launch a plant-based meal delivery business, which was novel then.”

Graydon at home in Riverdale, Toronto.

Recently married and with a baby at home, Graydon had found her niche. Many of her students were young moms, and she noticed that many of them struggled with red, dry, and sensitive skin.

Graydon offered her coconut milk and superfruit yogurt as an in-class treat and armed her students with a small jar to use at home on their faces. They noticed the difference it made on their skin and encouraged Graydon to expand the product line and offer treatments for sale.

Realizing that many women want beauty products that are made better than typical drug store fare, Graydon took this encouragement seriously and developed a plan to scale her business. Graydon Skincare is now distributed in Canada, the USA, and Hong Kong.

When asked what she would advise her younger self, Gradon replied, “Don’t worry so much, but always have a backup plan up your sleeve.”

Graydon is thinking about the future of her business, leveraging new biotechnology offerings to fuel ingredient curation for new product development. She feels that the future of beauty lies in biotechnology rather than natural resources from jungles and farmland, which yield oils, extracts, and actives for the formulation of many skincare brands on the market. Graydon’s next innovation? Her team will be helping to solve some of the world’s dirtiest problems with a brand-new alternative to palm oil. Good skin days? Absolutely. And perhaps, just perhaps, more good days—full stop. Check out graydonskincare.ca

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Writer: Julia (Stanley) Weaver ’78 is a Marguerite, having attended Havergal from JK to Grade 13. She obtained a degree in microbiology from the University of Guelph and, until retirement, worked in the biotech field, preparing documentation required by regulatory authorities such as Health Canada and the FDA. Julia spends her time travelling and volunteering with the ROM and Girl Guides.

Graydon’s outfit is from the Urban Traveler by Helene Clarkson ’84. heleneclarkson.com

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