This Walking Cane Also Hooks Bags and Grips Tables With a Hidden Ring

Every day balance moments don’t usually look dramatic. Standing up from a low chair after a long meal, stepping off a curb while carrying bags, and steadying yourself in a narrow hallway without anything to grab are the small transitions that feel minor until they don’t. Safety gear tends to be designed for bigger problems, but the real friction lives in these frequent, unremarkable moments that add up over the course of a day.

SafeGrip is a modular safety handle designed to offer a versatile solution to exactly those “micro safety issues,” particularly for elderly individuals and anyone who needs balance support in daily life. The tagline is “Grip life with confidence,” and the design backs that up by turning a single compact object into a walking cane, a carry hook, and a furniture anchor point, depending on what the moment requires.

Designer: Batuhan Duran

As a cane, the handle shape does a lot of quiet work. The large grip opening and soft, rounded edges allow different hand sizes and grip styles, so it doesn’t demand a precise hold. That gentler geometry reduces pressure on arthritic or tired hands, and the clean, non-clinical look means it’s the kind of thing you’d keep by the door or beside a chair rather than hiding it away, which matters more than most cane designers seem to realize.

Carrying bags while walking is one of those everyday tasks that throws off balance in ways that accumulate slowly. The built-in hook function lets SafeGrip carry shopping loads, taking the pull off the wrist and keeping the user steadier. At a doorway, elevator, or checkout counter, having the bags on the cane instead of dangling from a hand changes how the body distributes weight, even slightly, which counts when stability is already a concern.

The mechanical retractable ring system is the feature that makes furniture anchoring possible. The ring extends to create a secure loop that can grip onto a table edge or chair, turning the nearest piece of furniture into a temporary grab rail. That makes the sit-to-stand transition, one of the most commonly risky daily movements, feel more controlled without requiring any installed hardware or home modifications.

A telescopic height adjustment mechanism at the neck of the handle allows incremental length changes through nesting profiles, with numbered level indicators so users can identify and return to the right height reliably. That repeatability matters when the cane is used by more than one person or when it’s stored and reset regularly throughout the day.

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SafeGrip treats stability as an everyday design problem rather than a medical category. It combines three helpful roles without adding complexity, and it looks like a considered product rather than hospital equipment. The best safety tools are usually the ones people actually keep nearby, and a handle that fits into daily life instead of announcing its purpose makes that a lot more likely.