Last week, Apple released a MagSafe-compatible phone grip designed with accessibility in mind. The USD 70 accessory quickly sold out. Created to mark four decades of Apple's accessibility initiatives and designed by Bailey Hikawa, the grip emerged from interviews with people whose muscle strength, dexterity or hand control made standard phone handling difficult. What started as an accommodation has found a wider audience, one that extends well beyond its original design parameters.Hikawa, a Los Angeles-based artist whose previous work spans conceptual sculpture and custom toilet seats, designed the grip around varied holding patterns rather than retrofitting existing hardware. The product functions as both a phone stand supporting devices vertically and horizontally at two angles and addresses the slippery surfaces common to most mobile devices. Available in Chartreuse and recycled Crater, its sculptural form and high-visibility colorways reflect Hikawa's gallery practice, avoiding the purely functional or boring aesthetics often associated with assistive products.TREND BITEThe rapid sellout of an accessibility-focused accessory reflects shifting consumer attitudes toward inclusive design. Adaptive products are moving from specialized catalogs into mainstream retail, in part because they often solve problems that affect far more people than initially assumed in this case, maintaining a secure grip on a phone. As populations age and awareness of diverse physical needs expands, brands that build accessibility into products from the start, rather than treating it as an add-on, stand to benefit. The Hikawa grip suggests that inclusive design and commercial appeal aren't at odds, particularly when the resulting product addresses genuine usability gaps.
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