Every Day Carry (EDC)

DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
edited November 18 in Heaven
I have recently fallen down the YouTube rabbit hole of everyday carry. I wondered if anyone else had got into this.

I think it started when men realised handbags were useful but wanted a less feminine rebrand. Hence also bumbags/fanny packs being rebranded as slings. (It has now circled round and there are woman centric versions to - though this obviously assumes performing a conventional gender role - there is in fact nothing to stop me carrying a multitool and a UK street legal pocket knife.)

The logic is sort of emergency preparedness plus having easy access to things you use regularly and optimising them.

Anyone else got into this trend ? (Be warned your budget suddenly realises you need to upgrade your wallet, key chain, multitool etc)
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Comments

  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited November 18
    Needing to walk with the aid of two crutches (Lefty and Righty), I obtained some time ago (courtesy of Mr E Bay) what I think is technically a shoulder-bag, though I wear it round my neck, and dangling on my frontal regions IYSWIM.

    It has several zip-up compartments, one of which holds my keys, phone, debit card, and emergency medical supplies. I think it's probably one of the most sensible and useful things I've ever bought. Any malefactor or cutpurse trying to relieve me of it might have to contend with either Lefty or Righty poking them in the eye...
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited November 18
    Ah, you have a sling ! You can get some that are intended to be worn sort of diagonally across the front of your chest, but closer into the body.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    I have a rather nice leather ‘messenger bag’ by Conkca which I can wear on the shoulder, across the body (front or back), or even, if cycling, over both shoulders like an old style school satchel.
  • I think it started when men realised handbags were useful but wanted a less feminine rebrand. Hence also bumbags/fanny packs being rebranded as slings. (It has now circled round and there are woman centric versions to - though this obviously assumes performing a conventional gender role - there is in fact nothing to stop me carrying a multitool and a UK street legal pocket knife.)

    Is this some sort of nightmare corollary of the problem that women's clothing tends to be rather inadequately equipped in the pocket department?

    My "everyday carry" kit is limited to my pockets, because that's what I'll actually carry with me anywhere. My work bag has a variety of useful odds and ends, but I don't take it out and about with me.

    (Right hip pocket: phone and wallet. Left hip pocket: ridiculous number of keys on ring, pocket knife. Sometimes also glasses in case, but I tend to avoid carrying my glasses around and just squint at things.)
  • I loathe and despise having to carry purses or anything like them, and successfully avoided them until I had a baby. Babies require so much crap it's impossible to avoid toting an army's worth of bags etc. around with them. And they quickly develop a habit of expecting Mom to take any object they don't want to carry at the moment and squirrel it away for them, producing it on demand wherever they may happen to be when the desire next hits. (This in my opinion is why so many men automatically hand shit to their wives instead of putting it in a pocket or carrying a bag of their own.)

    I think of bag carrying as a kind of slavery, truthfully. I'm trying to get free of it. But it's very very hard when every male around me thinks I'm there to carry his crap ("It won't fit in my pockets"). Took me years to train Mr. Lamb to re-evaluate his habit of handing me crap. I had to ask him "Why are you handing me this?" Which provoked the reply "Because you are there." LL, at least, carries a bag of his own (repurposed laptop bag).
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited November 18
    Ah, but have you optimised your keychain ? I’ve gone for one of those orbit key style organisers, though a cheaper version.

    However, I have noticed some modular multitools allow you to fit key blanks, so you could have your keys in a Swiss Army knife form factor - the flex companion for example.
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Oddly, having been conditioned from childhood to need a handbag for all my feminine impedimenta - purse, keys, comb, compact, lipstick, tissues, pen, hairpins and dear knows what else besides, I Just Stopped. Possibly it was the early months of lockdown when I needed hands free for toting groceries and the only really useful bag was a rucksack (we couldn't drive to supermarkets and deliveries were initially very hard to come by).

    But it has stuck. I commonly wear trousers with pockets, ditto a jacket. I carry a small card case with some paper money tucked in as well, bus pass, house keys and my phone. I do take a fabric bag for carrying shopping and that contains spare glasses for reading small labels.

    The only other bag is for Art-specific - pencils, paintbox, brush roll, palette, paper, clipboard, plastic cup.
  • Ah, but have you optimised your keychain ? I’ve gone for one of those orbit key style organisers, though a cheaper version.

    Current key chain contains 17 door keys of various sizes, one Allan key, one electronic rfid key, and one car key. Oh, and a little LED light. I went to the one-big-ring solution to optimize me not leaving my keys anywhere, after I went home for the weekend and left my office keys hanging from my office door. Now all the keys are on the ring with my car key, it's impossible for me to leave without them.
  • A bag? Isn't this why a gentleman pays a manservant?
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    @Leorning Cniht you can get 28 keys in a keybar if you have the extension set.
  • TrudyTrudy Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    I am another woman who fled the Tyranny of the Purse in my 20s, got tied down by a diaper bag in my early 30s, and enjoyed many years of "I only take what I can carry in my pockets" (generally my keys, and my phone which is in a wallet case so that my phone and wallet are one).

    I do still like to travel light, but now that I'm retired I spend a lot of time hucking my laptop around to various coffee shops to write in, etc., and I do carry a purse to church and a couple of other places. I have recently decided that the three absolute essentials that I have to have with me (beyond the pocket items) are breath mints, lip balm, and a pen. So I have multiples of those things and have stocked them in my purse, my backpack, and my laptop bag, so that if I do need to grab a bag as I leave the house, whatever bag I grab is guaranteed to have the Basics of Life.

    The other EDC essential, if you check the pockets of all my outside jackets, appears to be dog-poop bags. Not because I always take the dog when I go out, but because when I do take her for a walk, it's just easier to have every possible jacket pre-loaded with these essentials.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    Some folk make an edc pouch then move it bag to bag, coat to coat, pocket to pocket. I don’t think I would remember to relocate it though.
  • HeavenlyannieHeavenlyannie Shipmate
    edited November 18
    Several of the men in my life have ‘man bags’; I bought my sons leather handbags about 5 years ago and I use the same style as I like a neat cross body bag, like this one https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BRNGPWYY?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_dt_b_fed_asin_title_4&th=1 I’ve actually bought Mr Heavenly’s nephews leather man bags for Christmas.
    My youngest son wears his every day, mostly for carrying his headphones which are his every day essentials. Mine is for carrying a book, keys and my phone. I don’t carry much and I just put what I need in in a bag (I have several bright colours) as and when.

    When I go for a walk I just put my keys in a pocket. I’ve had a small pen torch on my key ring since I was a student nurse for testing pupil reactions (and later in my career for quick eye examination in eye casualty). It is currently used daily to light the route from my garden office in the evening. So that is my EDC essential.
  • I have a pleather man bag for work stuff (the folder of doom, a notebook, plectra etc) a rucksack for extra work stuff when required (flask of tea, packed lunch, more books, laptop once a week), a pleather marvel superhero man bag for non workstuff (sermon notes back in the day) it's now a briefcase for paperwork relating to the late mother in laws estate, I have a couple of totes from record shops (one with jimi hendrix on it) which do the non work duties these days. My work guitar case has many pockets for wires, strings, straps etc..
  • My everyday carry (a new term to me) items are my wallet, my iPhone, keys, a comb, a glasses cloth and a Swiss Army knife. For keys, I have two key rings: one has the key to my car and three other keys, one has the key to my wife’s car and two other keys.

    Everything fits easily into pants pockets.


  • I am rather sad that I can no longer wear jumpers, because I need to carry one (really three) pairs of glasses to be worn in various combinations to see things. So I need several breast pockets, which means thick shirt on top of thin shirt, and anything without a breast pocket goes out. I recently found a 'chore jacket' on ebay which has yet more pockets, and probably makes me look like an aging French laundrette attendant.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    I really ought to use a small bag for essentials ( phone, keys, cards, purse, tissues) that I can transfer between the various bags which I use regularly ie handbag( US purse), rucksack, music case , as it is quite a chore transferring contents several times a week.

    For a quick shop in Aldi across the road I put bank card and door key in my pocket.

    I still have leather bags of many types belonging to Mr P which none of the family wants: manbag, laptop bag, various holdalls, briefcases, robe case, satchel type bag, all in good condition. He seemed to accumulate such things, amongst many other accumulations. Gradually they are going to charity shops when I remember.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    I am rather sad that I can no longer wear jumpers, because I need to carry one (really three) pairs of glasses to be worn in various combinations to see things. So I need several breast pockets, which means thick shirt on top of thin shirt, and anything without a breast pocket goes out. I recently found a 'chore jacket' on ebay which has yet more pockets, and probably makes me look like an aging French laundrette attendant.

    Can you wear cardigans or hoodies?
  • I stopped carrying a handbag, (or even a purse) on a regular basis during Covid. My phone doubles as a wallet lives in my right pocket. In the other pocket is keys (house and car) and that is all I go out with on many occasions. I try to avoid clothes that don;t have pockets sometimes I actually add pockets to clothes that lack them, or extend miniscule pockets to make them a usable size. If I think I might need cash (eg church or choir) I'll grab my everyday handbag that contains my purse (along with all sorts of other stuff like tissues, chewing gum, umbrella, shopping bags etc ... and yes I think theres a swiss army knife in there somewhere.) If I'm going out for a dressier occasion I will choose a smart handbag that goes with my outfit, but that will probably only contain phone keys and maybe printed tickets, possible a purse also, but often not ... we live in a contactless payment world!
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    I carry a fabric tote bag, but it gets heavy easily and is also not waterproof. I don't know if a sling bag would be big enough for me - I typically carry a hat, sunglasses (in the cold sunny snap in the UK right now, the sun can be very bright!), lip balm, hand cream, a folding hairbrush/mirror, overhead noise-cancelling headphones (the most essential thing of all), a portable charger, folding plug and USB cable. I also have a folding hand fan from summer which I have forgotten to take out, and about a thousand receipts. My keys plus keychain purse goes in my left pocket and my phone in my right pocket.
  • When more active I always hated carrying a handbag, everything had to go in my pockets. The clutter I have to carry around seems to weigh less when distributed round several pockets, but becomes really heavy if packed into a handbag.

    Nowadays, away from home, I habitually use my Nordic poles for support as, having used them for their proper purpose for years, I am habituated to use that rhythm when walking.
    Of course they do occupy both hands, so I now carry everything in a cross-body bag with numerous zipped compartments.
    I do have to take Mr RoS with me if I am shopping, as I can't carry the extra bags ;)
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited November 19
    Pomona wrote: »
    I carry a fabric tote bag, but it gets heavy easily and is also not waterproof. I don't know if a sling bag would be big enough for me - I typically carry a hat, sunglasses (in the cold sunny snap in the UK right now, the sun can be very bright!), lip balm, hand cream, a folding hairbrush/mirror, overhead noise-cancelling headphones (the most essential thing of all), a portable charger, folding plug and USB cable. I also have a folding hand fan from summer which I have forgotten to take out, and about a thousand receipts. My keys plus keychain purse goes in my left pocket and my phone in my right pocket.

    You can definitely get that selection in a sling (some of which are waterproof or water resistant), base that on videos of people showing how they pack their slings. But you would have to pick the right one. This kind of thing.
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    As a scientist and therefore an inveterate attendee at conferences Mr F - and sometimes I as 'accompanying person' have collected a hall cupboardful of bags - shoulder bags, briefcases, rucksacks and innumerable cotton carrier bags. Added to those are the holiday purchases and the well-meant gifts.

    Some - usually the cotton carriers - get adopted as project bags to hold the yarn for a particular knit or crochet.

    Some small round the neck bags were travel bags, holding money and documents needed en route. But one of these mysteriously disappeared with, I suspect, my passport at the time. Yet it could only have been after I got home, or I would have discovered the loss at the airport.

    After that, the next trip abroad, I sewed pockets onto the front of a T-shirt.
  • I have several fitted cotton duster coats I often wear as overdresses (I have a very hippy look). They now have huge pockets hand sewn inside which I can put a small crossbody bag in for Ryan Air flights as I have a separate mini suitcase as my free hand luggage.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    I have one small crossbody handbag which I use all the time. My physio says I must keep it lightweight.

    I carry phone/wallet, EpiPen, tissues, lip balm and keys.
  • I'm a cargo-trouser-pockets kind of person and have my phone in the left side and some keys on the right. Also on the right I might have reading glasses and/or a pen. I don't carry a wallet or anything with id other than my phone so if I fell under a bus nobody would know who I am.

    I think that doesn't bother me because I don't suppose it's going to happen. I'm just about to cycle to the nearby hospital to pick up a prescription. If I don't ever post again I am clearly very foolish.
  • I carry a shedload of id.

    My own name & address, name & phone number of spouse, names & phone numbers of LP Attorneys, list of medications, list of assorted ailments, and printed information about my ICD - which comes in an A5 size plastic envelope that I was told I should carry at all times.

    All the other stuff just got stuffed into the same envelope as I thought if I was in a situation where someone needed the ICDdetails they'd probably also need the other info.
    And that is why I now have an EDC, as I don't have big enough pockets.
  • @Roseofsharon said
    I carry a shedload of id.

    I think we all do, really, though I’m not a Freudian myself. It’s part of being human, and—

    I’ll get me coat. 😛
  • JabberwockyJabberwocky Shipmate
    edited November 20
    @Roseofsharon forgive the enquiry, but if you wouldn't mind, what is ICD?

    I used to carry one handbag that had various smaller bags in it, in case of this and that. This year I have pared this down to a small cross body bag with purse, keys, phone and a strip of painkillers.

    If I am going out on a trip or further away, I will add in a few more urgent medicines or bits and bobs that I might not automatically know where to get.

    When I first saw the thread title, I had to wonder if it related to a weapon!!!
  • ICD - Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator, a sort of pacemaker which has a defibrillator.
  • It's like a pacemaker plus defibrillator, implanted under the skin to monitor ventricular arrhythmia and deliver an electric shock, should that be necessary
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    I carry a fair bit of stuff around with me. I've finally discovered a pretty, waterproof backpack-style bag with various compartments and wide fabric straps that don't slip off my shoulders. In that - aside from the usual keys, purse, phone, tissues - are various little bags containing tablets (medicines), wipes, hair bands, a phone power pack, the spare key to my husband's car, a wooden holding cross, lip salve, cold sore cream, hand cream, a couple of pens and a small notebook.

    I have a matching (also waterproof) small cross-body bag and if I'm just out for a short outing that holds my keys, phone, tissues and small purse with cards in. If I'm out for the day, especially on public transport, my cards and phone and tissues go in there so I don't have to take the backpack off my back every time I need to check my phone or tap on/tap off the bus; the backpack will also hold a smallish reading book for a day out.

    It's taken me a long time to find a combination of bags that works and doesn't hurt my back or shoulders.

    My husband bought himself a man bag a long time ago but he never uses it and now doesn't know where it is, so his shirts have to have a breast pocket for his phone.
  • Yes, shirts with pockets have become crucial for me, especially in summer. I have tons of backpacks, manbags, etc., but dont use them a lot. Jackets with pockets take the strain.
  • @Heavenlyannie and @Roseofsharon thank you for the explanation! Wonders of modern medicine be praised!
  • Graven ImageGraven Image Shipmate
    edited November 20
    I have two fanny packs to match multiple outfits. These, however, are worn around the waist with the pouch in the front. They are styled to look like thin, soft, wide belts. When out and about, I carry ID, a phone, some cash, and a credit card. So much easier than a handbag. Hands-free.
  • I am curious who carries ID. Is this mandatory?
  • I carry ID, because every freaking place you go seems to want it--in my case, mostly hospitals and medical places (I see a LOT of these, both for myself and for the people in our community), and government offices such as the dept. of motor vehicles, various schools (which won't let you in the door unless you can show you're not a psycho shooter), city hall (same reason), and so forth. Also banks. There's really very little you can get done when it comes to caring for refugees and immigrants without ID around here. If I was just out for entertainment (eating, movies, etc.) it would be different.
  • jedijudyjedijudy Heaven Host
    I am curious who carries ID. Is this mandatory?

    I think all of us in the States who drive always have our ID on us, as it is also our driver's license.

    Once upon a time, I had a small crossbody purse that was light and easy on my back and shoulders. However, my emergency medical stuff didn't fit at all. Recently I got a small backpack that holds my collapsible cane, my emergency inhaler, medications, wallet, reading and sun glasses and all the other bits that I might need.
  • You should always carry id. Suppose you were in an accident and unconscious or worse. How would they know who you are?
  • la vie en rougela vie en rouge Purgatory Host, Circus Host
    I was starting to feel like an outlier, carrying a handbag. I have a leather one bought from an artisan leather worker. It's a cross body one because I am not infrequently carrying a cello on my two shoulders and I want my hands left free. Standard items are purse, diary (I am old school and use a paper one), phone, travel card, tissues and keys. When I get my new reading glasses, I'm hoping they'll fit. Anything else (book, Captain Pyjamas' afternoon snack...) goes in a tote bag. I'm currently using a rather cheesy Los Angeles one my sister-in-law gave me.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    edited November 20
    Left hand coat pocket: phone, with debit card, library card, driving licence and Historic Scotland membership card in phone case pockets.

    Right hand coat pocket: keys, dog treats, poo bags.

    I don't usually carry a handbag except in the summer, and then only when I am in an outfit that doesn't have any pockets. Of which there are FAR TOO MANY (outfits without pockets, that is).

    Carrying ID is not compulsory in the UK (except in polling stations, thank you Boris) but I do it anyway because otherwise I'd never be able to find my driving licence when I wanted it.
  • Jane R wrote: »
    Carrying ID is not compulsory in the UK (except in polling stations, thank you Boris) but I do it anyway because otherwise I'd never be able to find my driving licence when I wanted it.
    Carrying ID per se isn’t compulsory in the US either, but aside from needing to have your license on you if you’re driving (and as @jedijudy says, for most people in the US, driver’s licenses are their government-issued IDs), there can be a variety of other instances where ID is needed. At a bank, for example, or when buying something that’s age-restricted. In my experience, most people keep their driver’s license in their wallets, and most people take their wallets with them if the leave the house for anything other than a neighborhood walk or the like.

    I actually keep a duplicate driver’s license in my car.


  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Carrying ID per se isn’t compulsory in the US either,

    It is compulsory if you're a dirty foreigner like me.

    Technically it has always been compulsory, but until the current administration, it was one of those old laws that was on the books, but everyone ignored.

    I'm far from enthusiastic about having to carry my paperwork everywhere with me, because the hoops that you have to jump through with the INS in the event that your paperwork is lost or stolen are rather painful.
  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Carrying ID per se isn’t compulsory in the US either,
    It is compulsory if you're a dirty foreigner like me.
    Fair point, unfortunately.


  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Reminds me of Mr F's story of when he was touring the US by Greyhound - this would have been in the '70s. He was walking from the town he was staying in to some local sight when he was stopped by the police (pedestrianism being a suspicious activity). The only ID he had was a reader's ticket for Belfast Central Library. They found this hilarious and let him go.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Producing ID in the UK can be difficult for people who don’t drive or have given up driving, and don’t travel abroad, as driving license and passport are the two most readily accepted forms of ID. Bring on ID cards.
  • Well, I'm 80, and I've never carried or produced ID, except for banks and such. I can see that politicians want to underline their racism, by calling for them.
  • Puzzler wrote: »
    Producing ID in the UK can be difficult for people who don’t drive or have given up driving, and don’t travel abroad, as driving license and passport are the two most readily accepted forms of ID. Bring on ID cards.
    In the US, the state (or territorial/District of Columbia) agencies that provide driver’s licenses also provide photo IDs for those who don’t need a driver’s license.


  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited November 20
    My edc issue is that I can’t find a smallish, smart enough for work bag that has an insulated compartment for my lunch and also a pocket that will take an iPad mini and also a large enough bit for my mx mechanical mini keyboard and mx master mouse (which is a weird shape). With the possibility of a carrying a protein shaker on the side or within somehow.

    I realise this rather hyperspecifc and niche - but I like to hope that somewhere on the internet I will find one.

    My wallet, keys, multitool and pocket knife live in my pockets. I am also working towards a zippo bit kit. (Buy old knakered zippo on eBay for cheap, remove inards and insert zippo bit vault accessory, fill with double ended steinwal bits, and ideally a bit that will do eyeglass screws)
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    NicoleMR wrote: »
    You should always carry id. Suppose you were in an accident and unconscious or worse. How would they know who you are?

    My phone has all the details needed, including emergency contact etc on the lock screen (ice).
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