The market is flooded with charging cables and MagSafe chargers. But both standalone ones only add to the inconvenience of carrying them. The endless toil in the bag for a cable is an everyday chore for me. I’m sure many of you have fished endlessly at the bottom of the backpack/handbag for a charging cable? To find a solution to this problem, I was scrolling through options for accessories with built-in charging cables, when I came across this interesting project for a MagSafe Multipurpose Charging Cable Case on Behance.
It is designed like a hand grip mobile holder, which I first presumed this guy to be, until I saw the dangling cable and thought there was more to it than its design. The cable case is designed in a way to store a charging cable within a MagSafe-compatible accessory. Sounds unfamiliar? It probably is, I haven’t seen a similar concept before.
Designer: Jinkyo Han
If you look over the last decade, charging cables (which still remain important after wireless charging and MagSafe options) haven’t meaningfully changed. Of course, universal acceptance of USB-C cable does help, but the standardization doesn’t stop the cables from tangling and getting lost in the bag. Maybe, a MagSafe case that allows the changing cable to literally attach to the back of your iPhone, could, in a way limit that.
Therefore, Jinkyo has conceived this idea with a focus on convenience: “easy portability and instant charging when needed.” The accessory – called UNTITLE 1-219 – as imprinted on it, is divided into three parts, the MagSafe cable case, the changing cable that coils within it, and the clip end, which secures the dangling USB-A and USB-C ends on either side. This design does not consider the case and the cable as two easily lost appendages, instead imagines it as a MagSafe-compatible puck that snaps to the back of your phone and doubles as a storage, allowing changing cable to be coiled right inside; so, you can pull it out when you need to power your device.
And when you’re not using it, the case becomes a bit of drop prevention for the iPhone. The accessory may seem like a small – even useless – tweak to some, but for me, it is an accessory that has the potential to evolve past the drawing board. The idea of allowing the changing case to live on the phone instead of in the backpack is a logical option to the problem of tangling and lost cables. But how thick would this accessory make the phone and how much of an inconvenience it will be in daily usage, is, of course questionable. From where I see though, this accessory would mean one less thing to buy or lose.
The post This MagSafe cable case wants to end the eternal bag-digging for good first appeared on Yanko Design.

