Leah O’Connell and Weezie launch customizable Mother’s Day bath gifts
Leah O’Connell’s Mother’s Day capsule for Weezie turns towels, robes and toiletry bags into customizable gifts mothers can use every day.

Leah O’Connell and Weezie have put a sharper, more useful spin on Mother’s Day gifting: a limited-edition bath capsule built around pieces mothers can reach for every day, not just admire on arrival. The collaboration centers on customizable towels, robes and toiletry bags, with Weezie packaging the Mother’s Day gift set in its signature luxury box so the presentation feels finished before it is even opened.
The assortment includes a long lightweight robe and a large toiletry bag, along with a Bell Sleeve Plush Robe, a Short Plush Robe, Floral Scallop Bath Towels, Floral Scallop Hand Towels, a Floral Scallop Starter Pack and a wet bag. Weezie says the toiletry bags are fully wipeable, include an interior pocket and can be embroidered, while the hand towels and starter pack can also be personalized. That matters more than it sounds. A monogrammed robe is indulgent; a wipeable toiletry bag with an interior pocket is the kind of thing a mother actually keeps in rotation, from the powder room to a weekend bag.
Leah O’Connell, a San Francisco-based interior and textile designer, brings five signature prints into the mix: Vivian, Georgie, Holiday, Cora and Harriet. Weezie describes her style as layered, traditional-meets-California-ease, which fits the collection’s mix of floral motifs, scalloped edges and bright, composed color. O’Connell’s own label, Leah O’Connell Textiles and Wallpaper, is known for “irreverent charm and joyous color,” and that energy shows up here in bath pieces that feel polished without tipping into preciousness.

The practical appeal is matched by a clear value cue. Weezie says shoppers can save 15% when bundling certain sets, which gives the collection a more persuasive price point than buying each piece separately. For gift buyers, that combination of customization, giftwrap and everyday utility is the point: it reads as thoughtful rather than generic, and still feels seasonal enough for Mother’s Day without becoming tied to a single weekend in May.
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