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| String theory … why holding your phone by a thread is the new ‘in’ thing. Photograph: Casetify | Strap in! This summer’s must-have accessory is actually useful |
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Chloe Mac Donnell | |
| | In fashion – and non-fashion – circles of late there have been a lot of feelings about a certain accessory. Shock, awe, consternation, amusement, horror, delight … and that’s just from the Guardian fashion desk. Fashion is not averse to a ridiculous accessory. See, recently, a tiny Fendi lollipop holder, specifically tailored to the measurements of a Chupa Chups and yours for £440, or a Gucci canvas pet carrier for £2,290. But, sometimes, a trend emerges that is – whisper it – practical and affordable. Enter, this summer, the jazzy phone strap – freeing the palms of everyone from parents and pub-goers to Hollywood stars. Look around at rush hour, and commuters and tourists alike have their phones hooked on to corded straps and slung across sweaty torsos. Meanwhile, the finishing touch to gen Z’s OOTD videos on TikTok is to clip their phone on to a beaded strap and toss it around a wrist or shoulder. It’s a trend rooted in practicality. In the UK, the average person checks their phone every 12 minutes. A smartphone has essentially – alarmingly – become an extension of our upper limbs, with most of us not bothering to pop them in a bag or pocket. A strap makes carrying something like the biggest iPhone, which is about the size of a small paperback, less cumbersome. “In today’s world, our phones have become an extension of our central nervous system, integral to how we navigate daily life,” says Rachel Steed-Middleton, the founder of the London-based brand String Ting, which sells colourful beaded straps akin to candy sweet necklaces and counts Kendall Jenner and Dua Lipa as fans, alongside Gigi Hadid who favours a blue beaded strap with puffy cloud charms. At the Dutch brand Ateljé, a chain made from recycled pearls has sold out after fans spotted it in the trailer for season four of Emily in Paris. Topologie, a Hong Kong-founded brand inspired by rock climbing, offers colourful rope versions with quick-release carabiners and flexible bungee clasps, while Etsy features handmade versions spanning everything from giant resin chains to woollen crochet ones. Of course, luxury brands have been quick to tap into the burgeoning trend, with the high price tags to match. Prada sells a metal chain version with its triangle-shaped logo for £810, Miu Miu has a black-and-white-corded strap for £315, while Brunello Cucinelli offers a discreet suede version for £490. | | ‘An important security function’ … one of Casetify’s phone strap. Photograph: Casetify | But besides the handiness of being hands-free there’s another reason this accessory is having a moment in the sun. From bars to buses, social media is full of videos showing phones being snatched out of unsuspecting hands quicker than the time it takes to shout “stop!” According to figures from the Metropolitan police, a phone is stolen in London every six minutes. Just as a belt bag rather than a tote is advised for travelling, a phone strap adds a sense of extra reassurance and may in some cases act as a deterrent to nimble fingers. “We believe these accessories provide an important security function for our customers. The ability to keep a phone close to the body and have both hands free can help give users greater peace of mind, especially in crowded public settings,” says a spokesperson for Casetify, which started selling custom phone cases in 2011 and recently introduced a dedicated strap category – there are more than 35 options, including slick leather straps in subdued beige shades such as “oat milk”. But the biggest part of a phone strap’s appeal is, as Steed-Middleton points out, that it is yet another way to add personality to a functional – and much-flaunted – accessory. Smartphones appear in mirror selfies and are placed centre-stage on everything from work desks to dinner tables. We constantly whip them out to share memes IRL and to jot down podcast suggestions. While plain leather flip phone cases have earned the moniker “boomer cases”, younger generations favour something that offers a little more insight into their identity. Think Polaroid pictures of their dogs or tactile resin covered in bows. Phone straps are a natural augmentation of this type of customisation. If you really want to embrace the spirit, perhaps steer clear of Dior’s £1,050 leather case and gold chain and head instead to TikTok, where DIY tutorials will show you how, with ribbon or string and a bunch of cheap beads, you can make your phone very much your own. |
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| The Measure | What’s hot – and what’s most definitely not – this week | | Jade rollers: no match for ice-cream; Kendall Jenner reps Team USA; a puffin, yesterday. Composite: Getty/Rex/Shutterstock | Going up Puffins | See JW Anderson’s pelagic seabird clutch that is puffling its way up the must-have bag charts. Sorry, pigeons. Awkward tan lines | Scalloped edged swimsuits and double strap bikinis are making uneven tan lines a thing. Just go with it. Olympian cosplay | Kendall Jenner arrived in Paris to cheer on Team USA wearing the Ralph Lauren bomber jacket Olympian that flag-bearers will wear at the closing ceremony. If only PE kits had looked this good. Going down #TidyTok | Who knew Rihanna and A$AP Rocky were so relatable? Check out their gigantic marble kitchen island, covered in everything from tubs of washing powder to snacks and plastic baby toys #Messfluencing. Beauty fridges | DJ Khaled has a freezer dedicated to ice-cream. Ice lollies > icy jade rollers. Straw basket bags | Sofia Coppola has spent the summer lugging around a colourful canvas beach bag from Pacific Tote Co, the brand founded by her brother Roman. Long live nepotism! |
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| Reads of the week | | JD Vance: eyeliner enthusiast? Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP | |
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| Style Clinic | Chloe Mac Donnell, deputy fashion and lifestyle editor, solves your wardrobe dilemmas | | Emma Corrin shows the perfect length of sock. Photograph: Raymond Hall/GC Images | Q: I know according to gen Z, we’re all meant to be ditching hidden trainer socks for socks that show. But what length should they be? – Sophie, London A: Ah yes, the great sock divide that is possibly the defining argument of 2024. Time shall tell. The fit all depends on the length of your leg, but aim for something that hits just below the start of the calf muscle. Something like those modelled above by actor Emma Corrin. These type of socks are generally called crew socks. Gen Z favour plain white with trainers or a bright contrasting colour such as hot red with a brown loafer. Uniqlo have a pack of three ribbed versions to start you off. Got your own style question? Send it to fashionstatement@theguardian.com. |
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A staple of dystopian science fictions is an inner sanctum of privilege and an outer world peopled by the desperate poor. The insiders, living off the exploited labour of the outlands, are indifferent to the horrors beyond their walls.
As environmental breakdown accelerates, the planet itself is being treated as the outer world. A rich core extracts wealth from the periphery, often with horrendous cruelty, while the insiders turn their eyes from the human and environmental costs. The periphery becomes a sacrifice zone. Those in the core shrink to their air-conditioned offices.
At the Guardian, we seek to break out of the core and the mindset it cultivates. Guardian journalists tell the stories the rest of the media scarcely touch: stories from the periphery, such as David Azevedo, who died as a result of working on a construction site during an extreme heat wave in France. Or the people living in forgotten, “redlined” parts of US cities that, without the trees and green spaces of more prosperous suburbs, suffer worst from the urban heat island effect.
Exposing the threat of the climate emergency – and the greed of those who enable it – is central to the Guardian’s mission. But this is a collective effort – and we need your help.
If you can afford to fund the Guardian’s reporting, as a one-off payment or from just £4 per month, it will help us to share the truth about the influence of the fossil fuel giants and those that do their bidding.
Among the duties of journalism is to break down the perceptual walls between core and periphery, inside and outside, to confront power with its impacts, however remote they may seem. This is what we strive to do. Thank you. | |
George Monbiot, Guardian columnist |
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