Every time I travel for work or even just settle into a coffee shop for a few hours, I find myself unpacking the same small chaos from my bag. A charging cable here, a power bank there, earbuds somewhere, a phone stand that I bought separately and never quite like. It’s the modern tech tax: you carry things that exist only because the other things you carry aren’t designed well enough to stand on their own. MICO, a transformable tech pouch designed by Fulden Dehneli of Fuldende Design, is a direct, elegant argument against all of that.
The concept is straightforward, but the execution is genuinely clever. MICO folds through an intuitive mechanism to transform into a laptop stand, a phone stand, and a charging dock, all within seconds. It also comes with a built-in tracker, a built-in alarm, and a wirelessly rechargeable battery. And it does all of this while sitting at just 10mm thin. That last detail is worth pausing on. Ten millimeters is barely thicker than a pencil, and yet the thing is designed to hold your tech, prop up your laptop, and charge your devices.
Designer Name: Fulden Dehneli
The philosophy behind MICO is what Dehneli calls minimalist consumption: the idea that a well-designed product should let you do more with less. It’s a principle worth taking seriously right now, when most of us are already drowning in accessories and adapters that promise to solve one problem but quietly become another. A pouch that organizes your gear, charges it, props it up, and tracks it is not just convenient. It’s a genuinely different way of thinking about what an everyday object can be.
Dehneli is an award-winning industrial designer and the founder and creative director of Fuldende Design, a global design consultancy she established in Shanghai in 2019. She started her career in Stockholm, and over more than 13 years of practice across Turkey, Sweden, and China, she’s built a cross-cultural perspective that shows up in her work. Her portfolio has earned her multiple Red Dot and iF Product Design Awards, and MICO itself holds a Red Dot Award in the Design Concept category for Travel. That recognition isn’t incidental. It signals that the design community sees something in this product beyond a clever prototype.
The folding mechanism is where the real thinking shows. Instead of adding complexity to look impressive, it keeps things intuitive and human-friendly. You don’t need instructions. The transformation from pouch to stand to dock is the sort of thing that makes people at the airport stare for a moment before quietly wishing they had one. It doesn’t try to be beautiful in a loud way either. It’s clean, slim, considered. The kind of object you pick up and immediately understand.
The tech accessories market is crowded with products that do too much or too little. There’s rarely a middle ground where every feature actually earns its place. MICO sits in that rare zone, and the 10mm profile is a big reason why. Working within that kind of physical constraint forces better decisions across the board. You can’t be lazy about materials or mechanisms when you have almost no room to hide your shortcuts.
MICO is currently listed as Ready to Launch, meaning it hasn’t hit the mass market yet. But the interest is already there. The design has been celebrated on Behance with thousands of views, earned its Red Dot recognition, and comes from a designer with a consistent track record of taking strong ideas all the way through. If it makes it to production without losing what makes it interesting on paper, it has a real shot at changing how people think about the things they carry.
The best kind of product design doesn’t ask for your attention. It just shows up, does exactly what you need, and leaves you wondering why no one thought of it sooner. That’s the energy MICO is bringing to a category that was long overdue for a rethink.
The post A 10mm Tech Pouch That Finally Replaces 5 Things in Your Bag first appeared on Yanko Design.