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FinalStraw Collapsible Straw
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USA:
Most items ship from our warehouse in Milwaukee, WI, but if you are ordering a heavy or oversized item, we often have the manufacturer ship it directly to you to reduce shipping costs and save you money. Shipping rates are calculated at checkout based on shipment weight and destination. Eartheasy can ship to residential and commercial addresses in all 50 US States, but unfortunately oversized products do not ship to Alaska or Hawaii. If you are in Alaska or Hawaii and have your heart set on an oversized item, give us a call and we’ll try our best to help you with a freight quote. Unfortunately we do not ship to U.S. Territories or U.S. military installations at this time, but we are working on making these options available soon.
Canada:
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Unfortunately we cannot ship internationally, including Mexico or freight forwarders. We apologize for any inconvenience.
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The «Lead Time» on a product specifies the number of business days for your item to be prepared by our warehouse. The Lead Time does not include the date the order is placed. This also applies for all shipping methods, including express methods. If your item is shipping freight, you will receive a call to schedule the delivery with your driver. If your shopping cart has multiple items, a shipping charge may apply even if some items are listed as «Free Shipping», as charges apply to items rather than total cart quantities.
Suck responsibly with FinalStraw – the original, reusable, collapsible straw you can take wherever you go. Pick your straw and case color above!
Overview
Features & Benefits:
What’s included in a FinalStraw?
FinalStraw’s Mission
Americans use 500 million straws every single day. Because they are so lightweight, straws blow into waterways where they head out to sea and harm wildlife. Plastic straws cannot be recycled, they do not decompose, and they pollute our land and oceans.
FinalStraw was developed to reduce plastic straw use by giving people a convenient, collapsible, reusable alternative. In doing so they hope to make the public more aware of the devastating effects of plastic pollution and use that awareness to spark the knowledge about our plastic pollution problem.
What is FinalStraw made of?
Orca tears, octopus toe nails, mermaid love, and stainless steel. The inner elastic material is made from medical and food-grade silicone, as is the cleaning squeegee. The case is made from recycled plastic. FinalStraw is latex free.
What are the dimensions of the straw?
The straw is 9 inches long, folds into 4 pieces and has an outside diameter of 9mm and inside diameter of 5mm. The case is 3 inches tall and 1 inch square on the bottom. It contains a removable drying rack and built in cleaning squeegee.
How to clean FinalStraw?
To wash your FinalStraw, wash the outside with soap and water, then put a dab of soap on the brush and scrub. Rinse with hot water and repeat as necessary.
How durable is FinalStraw?
FinalStraw is built to last! Testing showed FinalStraws are rated at 12,000 cycles. This works out to about two uses a day for 16 years.
Suck responsibly with FinalStraw – the original, reusable, collapsible straw you can take wherever you go. Pick your straw and case color above!
Overview
Features & Benefits:
What’s included in a FinalStraw?
FinalStraw’s Mission
Americans use 500 million straws every single day. Because they are so lightweight, straws blow into waterways where they head out to sea and harm wildlife. Plastic straws cannot be recycled, they do not decompose, and they pollute our land and oceans.
FinalStraw was developed to reduce plastic straw use by giving people a convenient, collapsible, reusable alternative. In doing so they hope to make the public more aware of the devastating effects of plastic pollution and use that awareness to spark the knowledge about our plastic pollution problem.
What is FinalStraw made of?
Orca tears, octopus toe nails, mermaid love, and stainless steel. The inner elastic material is made from medical and food-grade silicone, as is the cleaning squeegee. The case is made from recycled plastic. FinalStraw is latex free.
What are the dimensions of the straw?
The straw is 9 inches long, folds into 4 pieces and has an outside diameter of 9mm and inside diameter of 5mm. The case is 3 inches tall and 1 inch square on the bottom. It contains a removable drying rack and built in cleaning squeegee.
How to clean FinalStraw?
To wash your FinalStraw, wash the outside with soap and water, then put a dab of soap on the brush and scrub. Rinse with hot water and repeat as necessary.
How durable is FinalStraw?
FinalStraw is built to last! Testing showed FinalStraws are rated at 12,000 cycles. This works out to about two uses a day for 16 years.
Collapsible, reusable, easy to clean. It’s the Final Straw for single-use tubular plastic polluters everywhere.
Plastic straws are some of the most environmentally unsafe everyday products we use. They cannot be recycled, and they don’t decompose. What they can and do do: trash up our cities and parks, and attack our beaches and oceans. The Final Straw team points out that Americans alone use 500 million plastic straws a day.
In an effort to curb the waste, and also to make a piece of EDC that is «totally badass,» Emma Cohen, Miles Pepper, and Jessica Girard created The Final Straw. Made of triple-jointed stainless steel, The Final Straw folds to fit into a keychain-sized recycled ABS carrier for access whenever you need it. The straw’s interior tubing material is medical-grade TPE for drinking as safe for you as a reusable straw is for the earth.
The Final Straw also comes with a cleaning squeegee, which tucks inside the case too. Total weight of toting your own drinking chute: 2.8 ounces.
The Final Straw completed a very successful crowfunding campaign on Kickstarter in May 2018, and is now available for direct purchase on Amazon.
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Wave Drink Siphon
I mean, I’m fine getting my own glass of SunnyD, but I guess if you really want to give me some of yours, alright. Go ahead and Wave it over.
HiccAway makes one hicc of a claim: it will stop your hiccups immediately. Designed by Dr. Ali Seifi, Director of the Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit at the University of Texas, the HiccAway device is basically a redesigned.
Shot Straws
First off, let me say that I do not advocate taking shots through a Shot Straw. I advocate taking shots like a real man. However, if the memory of particularly rough night with Minnesotan twins, a ZZ Top fan club, and.
Elephant Straws
Coming soon: drinking straws to quench your elephantine thirst. The reusable, eco-friendly Elephant Straws let you drop an Ellie into your glass of juice or sodie and slurp it out through the beast’s trunk.
Grim Stitch Factory Scarecrow Masks
If I only had a brain. I would have maybe thought twice before looking at Grim Stitch Factory’s Scarecrow Masks when I couldn’t sleep last night. Canadian Cameron Scholes is the ARRGH!tist behind these sinister Halloween.
Lustir Reusable Carbon Fiber Drinking Straws
Reusable drinking straws have become a new environmental trend. Rightfully so since, as Lustir points out, «Americans dispose of approximately 500 million plastic straws every day with most ending up in landfills or littering.
Stroodles Biodegradable Pasta Straws
Ice Straws
Ice straws are what I will give children to drink hot chocolate with so I don’t have to hear them whine and cry about how it’s too hot and they burnt their tongue and waaa, waaa, waaa, I want a hug. I often want a hug.
pureLYFT Energy Stir Sticks
A spinana-berry smoothie pureLYFT-ed up with a cuppa-coffee’s worth of caffeine. My girlfriend said that would knock out my Sunday hangover. And, washed down with 6 strips of bacon and some biscuits & gravy, it pretty.
Magic Milk Flavored Straws
The magic in Magic Milk Straws comes from their unique ability to convince kids to drink their milk without any added incentives other than a fun drinking straw.
Sip-A-Bowl, I slurp what you’re pouring here. You’ve got my favorite take on the reusable straw yet. The cereal bowl with a built-in straw is made for drinking down the last drop of my Froot-Loops-infused-milk, with the.
Сворачиваемое содержимое
Переключайте видимость контента в Вашем проекте с помощью нескольких классов и наших плагинов JavaScript.
Как это работает
Пример
Нажмите кнопки ниже, чтобы показать или скрыть другой элемент с помощью изменений класса:
Ссылка с href Кнопка с data-target
Множество целей
Переключить первый элемент Переключить второй элемент Переключить оба элемента
Доступность
Переменные
Классы
Использование
Плагин collapse использует несколько классов для работы:
Через атрибуты данных
Через JavaScript
Включить вручную с помощью:
Параметры
Методы
Асинхронные методы и переходы
Все методы API асинхронны и запускают переход. Они возвращаются к вызывающей стороне, как только переход начинается, но до его завершения. Кроме того, вызов метода переходного компонента будет проигнорирован.
Вы можете создать экземпляр сворачивания с помощью конструктора, например:
| Метод | Описание |
|---|---|
| toggle | Переключает складной элемент на показанный или скрытый. Возврат к вызывающей стороне до того, как сворачиваемый элемент будет фактически показан или скрыт (то есть событие происходит до shown.bs.collapse или hidden.bs.collapse ). |
| show | Показывает разборный элемент. Возврат к вызывающей стороне до фактического отображения сворачиваемого элемента (например, до возникновения события shown.bs.collapse ). |
| hide | Скрывает разборный элемент. Возврат к вызывающей стороне до фактического скрытия сворачиваемого элемента (например, до возникновения события hidden.bs.collapse ). |
| dispose | Уничтожает сворачиваемый элемент. (Удаляет сохраненные данные в элементе DOM) |
| getInstance | Статический метод, который позволяет вам получить экземпляр коллапса, связанный с элементом DOM, вы можете использовать его следующим образом: bootstrap.Collapse.getInstance(element) |
| getOrCreateInstance | Статический метод, который возвращает экземпляр коллапса, связанный с элементом DOM, или создает новый, если он не был инициализирован. Вы можете использовать это так: bootstrap.Collapse.getOrCreateInstance(element) |
События
Класс коллапса Bootstrap предоставляет несколько событий для подключения к функциональности коллапса.
Final Co. FinalStraw 2.0 Review
Reusable, collapsible, and durable, the FinalStraw is a great alternative to disposable plastic straws. Though it takes some time to get used to.
Our Verdict
Save time. Get access to brief summaries of our reviews so you can browse and make decisions more efficiently.
Technical Details
3.3 in x 1 in x 1 in (8.4 x 2.5 x 2.5 cm)
Silicone, Stainless Steel
Buying Options
Full Review
Get up to 10% off Final Co. with our Deals Vault • Join Pack Hacker Pro.
You know how some eco-groovy alternatives end up being both better for the planet and more convenient for you? (Think Lush’s Shampoo Bars—great for the planet and your hair.) The FinalStraw Reusable Collapsible Straw is not one of those things. At least, not when you first start using it.

At first, you’ll probably hate the FinalStraw (if you’re anything like us, anyway). It took about two weeks of forcing ourselves to use it before—suddenly—some flip switched and we started loving it.
Three months later and we’ve decided we can’t live without it. Cliche, yes. Hyperbolic, maybe. But we really do like it. So let’s check out all this collapsible, stainless steel reusable straw has to offer (oh, and we promise not to use any “suck” puns).
Our Experience
Plastic straws have gotten a pretty bad rap lately. And while they aren’t the only single-use plastic responsible for polluting our oceans—looking at you single-use plastic bags—that reputation is well-deserved. (Google plastic + oceans if you need some convincing and a good existential crisis.)
Reusable straws aren’t going to save the planet, but they’re a step in the right direction (at least in terms of plastic pollution). While the exact number isn’t clear, Americans reportedly use 500 million drinking straws per day. Imagine if even a quarter of Americans stopped contributing to this number—that would be a huge win for the planet.
That’s what we’ve had to remind ourselves time and again during the “rough period” of testing. There were two main reasons we didn’t like the FinalStraw at first: cleaning and convenience.

Let’s start with what seems to be the biggest gripe against reusable straws—cleaning them. Seriously, everyone on the internet seems to lament how difficult it is to clean reusable straws. And—perhaps if we wrote this review a month and a half ago—we would’ve been one of them. But it’s not that bad, people. Seriously.
Yes, it’s less convenient than just throwing something out. It annoyed us at first too. But after a couple of weeks, you get used to the idea, and the 45 seconds it takes to clean becomes not that big of a deal. (And the folks over at FinalStraw have a fun video featuring a mermaid in a bubble bath explaining how to clean your straw. So make sure you check that out).

We’ve been testing the FinalStraw 2.0, which comes with an extendable mini brush. To clean the interior of your straw, simply put a dollop of soap on the brush and start scrubbing.
Whenever the option is available, we recommend cleaning it as soon as you can. That way, you can put it back in its case without getting the case all gross (you’ll still need to wash out the case every once and awhile). And you don’t risk anything drying out and getting stuck to the interior of the straw. Smoothies or other sugary drinks, especially.
Of course, cleaning it right away is always trickier when you’re traveling. We’ve used coffee shop/airport/restaurant/rest stop bathrooms. If running water isn’t available, we’ve found sucking out as much of the drink as possible and a quick wipe down the exterior with a napkin works in a pinch (with a plan to thoroughly wash it later).
On occasion, you’ll also want to give your straw a deeper clean. Stick it in the dishwasher or, if you want to sterilize it, stick it in a pot of boiling water. After about three months of testing, the straw has started to smell a bit like coffee. We’ve soaked it in distilled white vinegar, and while the odor lessened, it’s still there. We believe it’ll disappear after another soak or two.
Whenever possible, we also recommend giving the FinalStraw proper time to dry before stashing it back in its case to prevent anything from building up. Just leave it out and let air-drying do its thing.

Now let’s talk about convenience.
Before testing, we didn’t realize how often spontaneous straw situations arise—random coffee runs, impromptu lunches, an inability to walk by smoothie stands without buying some strawberry-mango something-or-other (just us?). For the FinalStraw to be effective, you need to have it with you all of the time. Otherwise, it’ll sit in some drawer somewhere and you’ll think to yourself hmph, maybe I should’ve grabbed it before sucking down your piña colada with a plastic straw.
We can’t emphasize enough how frequently that scenario happened to us in the first two weeks (minus the piña colada, sadly).
Always having your straw with you will take a while to get used to. You’ll probably forget it more often then you’ll remember it at the beginning—even though the FinalStraw is more portable than plenty of stainless steel straws out there. It’s collapsible and folds neatly into its small carrying case. (Random aside—when you take the straw out of the case it unfolds on its own, which is very fun and reminiscent of magic wands.)

But it takes up almost no room in your bag. Yes, it’ll be even more of a burden to bring with you if you don’t often carry a purse, sling bag, or daypack around—but it will fit in your pockets. Trust us. While we think it’s too large for keychains, this straw is quite small.

We suggest treating it like an “essential” item. You know that checklist you mentally run through before you leave the house and/or Airbnb every morning: wallet, keys, phone? Make it wallet, keys, phone, FinalStraw.
Of course, you probably won’t be perfect. Sometimes, a straw moment will arise and you’ll have forgotten your FinalStraw. It happens. But it’ll happen less and less as you get used to using it. Especially since using the straw is a joy.

The interior is made from medical and food-grade silicone, which extends past the stainless steel exterior. Meaning, unlike some other reusable straws, you put your mouth on the silicone. You don’t have to suck on bamboo or stainless steel, which is never a fun time.
And putting silicone in your mouth is much more pleasant of an experience than putting flimsy plastic in your mouth. Something we’re reminded of whenever we accidentally have to use a plastic straw (while better for the environment, a paper straw is even worse).

While we’ve seen other reviewers complain about its diameter and effectiveness to slurp up thick drinks, we haven’t had any problems (and our team lives off of smoothies in the summertime). It doesn’t get clogged easily, stirs just as nicely as a plastic straw, and is tall enough to fit most drinks.
Also, the FinalStraw is a conversation starter. People always comment on it—and usually in a positive way. We’ve had several conversations about plastic waste since we began testing this thing and have initiated none of them.
Finally, you’ll feel good about mitigating your impact in regards to the plastic problem. Doubly so, because the company is a member of 1% for the Planet. Each year, they donate 1% of their sales to “environmental nonprofits that work to protect the environment, advocate for animals, educate youth, and empower women.”
Final Thoughts
While it took a couple of weeks, we’re now huge fans of the FinalStraw (if you haven’t been able to tell). It’s become one of those items we genuinely like to use and not only because of its eco-grooviness.
Speaking of eco-grooviness, there are a few arguments out there that we’d like to quickly address. Some people argue that the environmental impact of producing the straw outweighs the benefits of its reuse-ability, but we think that’s not really the point. Of course, production will always have an impact on our environment, but we’re talking about plastic pollution here and its effect on marine ecosystems.

Plus, by using the FinalStraw you’ll be more aware of how often you use straws—we’ve been blown away by it. Before testing, we didn’t realize how often we’d been contributing to the plastic straw problem—now that 500 million number from earlier seems more realistic. And educating yourself on your consumption habits is always an environmental win.
Also, some argue that people should just stop using straws altogether. If you’re the type of person where that works—then awesome. But that won’t work for everyone for any number of valid reasons.
One final note about durability. Because this straw folds into quarters, it feels very not durable. We’ve been worried the silicon interior will rip or tear after being folded/unfolded multiple times a day and sitting in its case all stretched out. But we haven’t had any issues yet. And the folks over at FinalStraw report that it’ll last 12,000 cycles or “about two uses a day for 16 years.” Hopefully, that’s true. We’ve gotten used to having this thing around.



















