A sling bag that improves the experience of walking tour guides by balancing security, function, comfort, sustainability, and style.
There are over 300,000 walking tour guides globally, each offering different experiences and having different needs.
Walking tours are often in high-density urban areas with higher risks of pickpocketing. Tours last anywhere between 2–8 hours — demanding a bag that can handle a full workday on foot.
Guides need to carry essentials, remain identifiable to their group, switch quickly between front-carry and back-carry, and keep valuable items secure — all while looking the part.
"I'd rather have a bag that can carry all the stuff I might need during the day. Smaller messenger bags barely fit enough items."
u/CasioMaker — Reddit"Comfort is key."
Reddit user"I hate that it's designed for only my left shoulder."
Reddit user
Walking tour guides need a bag that securely transitions between back and front-carry, comfortably fits a full workday of essentials, and is made from sustainable materials — without sacrificing their professional appearance.
Security
Comfort
Functionality
Sustainability
The bag was pattern-made and sewn from upcycled materials. Each seam and pocket placement was iterated through physical prototyping.
Physical prototyping revealed fit and comfort issues that sketches couldn't predict ��� iterating in material was essential, not optional.
Upcycled materials introduced unpredictable constraints. Working within those limitations pushed more creative pattern-making solutions.
The ambidextrous strap system was the most technically complex feature — early assumptions about buckle placement required significant revision after wearability testing.
User research (even lightweight, via forums) meaningfully shaped priorities — comfort and ambidexterity emerged as far more critical than initially assumed.
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