Apple just dropped something unexpected and pretty cool: the Hikawa Phone Grip & Stand, a $69.95 MagSafe accessory that looks more like a piece of modern art than your typical phone attachment. What makes this launch special isn’t just the design, though. It’s Apple’s way of marking 40 years of accessibility work, and honestly, it shows in every curve and ridge of this thing.
Los Angeles designer Bailey Hikawa didn’t just sketch this grip at a design table. She worked directly with people who deal with limited muscle strength, reduced dexterity, and various hand control challenges. That kind of collaboration makes a difference you can actually feel. The triangular silicone form accommodates different grip styles, letting users hold their phones with way less effort than usual. The magnetic MagSafe connection stays secure during use but snaps off easily when you’re done.
Designer: Apple
Here’s where it gets practical. The grip doubles as a stand that works in both portrait and landscape modes. Propping up your iPhone for a FaceTime call or binge-watching session suddenly doesn’t require awkward hand positions or makeshift setups. The premium silicone has that soft-touch feel that doesn’t irritate your hands during extended use, which matters more than you’d think.
Hikawa’s artistic background really shines through in the sculptural form. Each grip genuinely looks like something you’d see in a contemporary art gallery. Apple is offering two exclusive colors: Chartreuse, a bold greenish-yellow picked specifically for high visibility, and Crater, a recycled finish with gray, black, and white specks that feels surprisingly sophisticated. At 3.1 by 2.3 inches, it adds just enough bulk to be useful without turning your phone into a brick.
Compatibility spans everything from the iPhone 12 through the upcoming iPhone 17 lineup, including the new iPhone Air. Any MagSafe-enabled device works right out of the box. Sarah Herrlinger, Apple’s Head of Accessibility, made an interesting point about this product. She acknowledged that it’s designed to solve specific problems for certain users, and that’s perfectly fine. Not every accessibility tool needs to appeal to everyone.
This limited edition grip is exclusive to Apple’s U.S. online store, and given how fast their recent iPhone Pocket sold out, you might want to move quickly if it catches your eye. What strikes me most is how Apple’s bringing attention to accessible design without making it feel like charity or an afterthought. The Hikawa grip works because it’s genuinely useful and genuinely beautiful, proving those two things don’t have to be mutually exclusive.
The post Apple’s $70 Hikawa Grip Proves Accessibility & Art Can Coexist first appeared on Yanko Design.

