The Brief

WUKA, the UK's first fully leak-proof reusable period wear brand, was founded on the belief that nothing should hold you back. B Corp certified, boldly female-led, and built around a mission to eliminate period stigma, tackle period poverty, and make sustainable living genuinely accessible: this is not a brand that gifts carelessly.

When your brand name stands for Wake Up, Kick Ass, the gift has to mean something.

What We Made

100 individually printed butter biscuits, each bearing WUKA's branding, packed into 10 neat packs of 10.

Every biscuit was made exclusively to order in our Leeds kitchen, which is the only way we work. No batch production sitting on our shelves. Just one order, made properly, for one brand that cares about doing things properly.

The Turnaround

Enquiry received: 17 April 2026. Shipped: 24 April 2026. Seven days, start to finish. The order went out across three parcels with tracking passed directly to our contact, Rebecca, so she had full visibility throughout.

Why It Works

WUKA's ethos sits on a clear conviction: sustainability should not be a luxury, and neither should feeling good. When a brand with that kind of clarity chooses a gift, they are not looking for something generic off a shelf. They are looking for something that carries the same intention they bring to everything else they do.

Which is precisely what we are here for.

A Note on Purpose-Driven Gifting

The brands that resonate most with what we do at The Biskery are not necessarily the largest. They are the ones who have thought carefully about why they give, not just what they give.

WUKA is a textbook example of that. Community-led, values-anchored, and genuinely connected to the people they serve: gifting for a brand like this is not transactional. It is an extension of who they are.

If your brand lives by its values, your gifts should too. Tell us what you have in mind.

Written by Saskia Roskam

Find similar articles

Case Study

Leave a comment

More stories

Tea and Biscuits: A Love Story 300 Years in the Making

Tea arrived in Britain when Catherine of Braganza, a Portuguese princess, married King Charles II in 1662. She brought with her an ardent love of the beverage, and the British court followed her lead.

The East India Company, ever attentive to where appetite and opportunity overlapped, secured exclusive rights to import tea from China in 1669. Within a century, what had begun as an aristocratic indulgence had quietly become a household fixture.

iCandy x The Biskery

Across the UK 460 iCandy branded biscuits made their way into the hands of retailers and customers. 

"We're really happy with them. Thank you so much for your help!"

Melissa