Wednesday, November 6, 2024
AccessoriesiPhoneNews

WaterField Design introduces two iPhone 14 holsters

WaterField Designs has introduced two handcrafted, American-made iPhone 14 cases: the Zip iPhone Holster and the Finn iPhone Holster Wallet

According to company founder Gary WaterField the holsters are ideally suit contractors, field technicians, or adventure seekers looking to free up their pants pockets with a more comfortable and secure way to carry their iPhone 14 and wallet.

The holsters are available in full-grain leather or rugged ballistic nylon and close with YKK waterproof zippers. The Zip iPhone Holster (pictured above) can fit the iPhone 14 Pro or Pro Max “naked,” in an Apple Case, or in a variety of bulkier third-party, drop-proof iPhone cases along with five credit cards or an AirPods case. 

The Finn iPhone Holster Wallet (pictured below) functions as both an iPhone case and a wallet to hold a phone, cash, and cards. Worn on the hip or attached to a bag strap, these iPhone holsters blend hands-free convenience with instant accessibility, an ideal combination for anyone looking for a secure and comfortable way to carry an iPhone, according to WaterField.

The Zip iPhone Holster costs US$79 for the black ballistic nylon and $89 for the premium full-grain leather version. It comes in sizes for the iPhone 14 and 14 Pro (naked or within Apple Case) and the iPhone 14 Pro Max( fits iPhone 14 Plus and Pro Max, naked or within an Apple case) or iPhone Pro (within bulky drop-proof case). There’s a large version that fits iPhone 14 Plus and Pro Max (within bulky drop-proof case).

The Finn iPhone Holster Wallet costs $89 for the black ballistic nylon model and $99 for the premium full-grain leather version. It fits the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro (naked or within an Apple case), iPhone 14 Plus and Pro Max (naked or within an Apple Case) or the iPhone Pro (within a bulky drop-proof case).

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.