Subway Scrunchie

A “First Aid Kit” for Women Using Public Transportation

A “First Aid Kit” for women

using public transportation

Keeping a pulse on subcultures for product innovation. Above: One user’s TikTok explaining concept of the subway shirt.

Product Demo Goes Viral

Leaning on my previous experience creating TikTok ads for DTC clients, I turned to the platform to post the product demo I filmed at midnight in the 77th st. station. By the time I was presenting my work the next morning, the post had 200k views and an active comments section. The video has since reached 933k views with a 766% engagement rate.

This project serves as an example of the benefits of leveraging social media for quick feedback to inform early prototyping. Commenters suggested changes to the form, proposed new use cases, validated the product and also questioned the concept in the context of male gaze.

Public transportation in a city like New York presents commuters with countless obstacles. But for women in particular, one common scenario is unwanted attention. There’s one solution which emerged as a grassroots movement across major cities: women will wear a loose piece of clothing to ‘dampen their outfits’ when going out and especially during warmer months. This is what the internet calls the ‘Subway Shirt’. However, it’s impractical.

What if you’re traveling without a bag? What if it’s not part of your outfit? Where do you put it when you reach the bar? The Subway Scrunchie allows you to fold the subway shirt into a wearable accessory for storage that’s portable and accessible. 

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