Description
- Description
- Features
- About The Brand
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The Small Tech Pouch takes the award-winning design, utility, and aesthetics of our bestselling original Tech Pouch, and scales it all down to half-size. Small enough to stuff in any corner of any bag, yet impressively full-featured, the Small Tech Pouch is ideal for everyday essentials like cords, cards, batteries, and chargers (fits all Apple brick-style chargers).
Interior features a 12-pocket design, including 4 large origami-style pockets for larger items, a variety of smaller stretch and zip pockets for small things, and a single pen/stylus loop. Exterior is durable and weatherproof thanks to proprietery Versa Shell™ 400D external fabric and burly #8 UltraZip™. Bag opens extra-wide and sits perfectly upright for total visibility and access. External grab handle and corner pleats make it easy to pull the pouch out of tight spaces. 2 Cord Hook™ loops allow you to connect any PD camera strap or carry strap (sold seperately) to convert the pouch into a sling bag. Fair Trade Certified and 100% carbon neutral. Higher price of Coyote colorway due to material & development costs (see specs).
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External Dimensions
24 cm x 11.5 cm x 9 cm (9.5″ x 4.5″ x 3.5″)
Internal Dimensions
23 cm x 10.5 cm x 8 cm (9″ x 4.1″ x 3.1″)
Capacity
1L
Weight
195g (6.9oz)
Materials & Sustainability
Versa Shell™ 400D 100% recycled weatherproof exterior
Super-durable #8 UltraZip with abrasion-resistant UHMPE thread
High-visibility grey nylon/polyester interior
Interior & exterior fabrics are Bluesign approved
Interior & exterior fabrics are Solution-dyed to save energy and water consumption
Hypalon stress points and logo badge (Black). Sage, Midnight, & Charcoal have leather logo badge, Gold-Rated by Leather Working Group
PFAS-free. Uses C0 DWR, a water-repelling treatment that is a more eco-friendly alternative to traditional DWR treatments
What’s In The Box
(1) Small Tech Pouch
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In 2010, a fresh-faced, Minnesota-born, good-to-know-ya fella named Peter Dering went on a 4-month trip around the world. During this trip he learned that carrying a DSLR camera is a pain in the touchis. He returned to his San Francisco apartment and did what any responsible person would do: quit his nice job and spent 10 months designing a little thingy-dingy for carrying cameras. In May 2011 Peter launched that thingy-dingy (we now call it Capture) on a fledgling website called Kickstarter. It worked, and Peak Design was born. Peter started hiring friends, friends of friends, and random people he met at concerts. Peak Design got itself a little office in San Francisco’s Dogpatch neighborhood.
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