Accessories Performance
Beyond looks, accessories are judged on how they hold up. This hub explains the performance terms you will meet -- from water and scratch resistance to security features like RFID protection -- grouped by protection, durability and everyday resilience.
Protection
Water Resistance
The ability to shrug off light rain and splashes without soaking.
What it is
Water resistance means a material resists water for a time, through coatings, waxes or tight weaves, but is not fully sealed.
Why it matters
It protects contents in showers and spills, though prolonged wet will eventually get through.
Waterproof
A fully sealed construction that keeps water out.
What it is
Waterproof accessories use welded seams or coated fabrics rated to block water entirely, not just resist it.
Why it matters
It matters for wash bags and travel pieces that must keep contents dry in heavy wet.
RFID Protection
A shielding layer that blocks wireless reading of contactless cards.
What it is
RFID protection lines a wallet with a conductive layer that blocks the radio signal contactless cards use.
Why it matters
It stops cards being read at close range without your knowledge, adding security to a wallet.
Durability
Scratch Resistance
A surface that resists marks from keys, nails and daily handling.
What it is
Scratch resistance comes from textured or coated finishes such as saffiano that hide and resist surface marks.
Why it matters
It keeps wallets and bags looking new for longer in pockets and bags full of other items.
Abrasion Resistance
The ability to withstand rubbing and scuffing over time.
What it is
Abrasion resistance is a material's resilience to wear from rubbing, highest in fabrics like ballistic nylon and Cordura.
Why it matters
It determines how well corners, bases and straps survive years of contact and travel.
Durability
Overall long-term resilience across materials, stitching and hardware.
What it is
Durability is the sum of leather grade, stitch method, edge finishing and hardware quality working together.
Why it matters
It is the true measure of value: a durable accessory outlasts several cheaper replacements.
Everyday resilience
Colour Fastness
How well dye resists fading and transfer with wear.
What it is
Colour fastness measures a material's resistance to losing colour through light, rubbing or moisture.
Why it matters
It keeps a bag or belt true to colour and stops dye rubbing onto clothing.
Easy-Clean Materials
Coated or synthetic surfaces that wipe clean.
What it is
Easy-clean materials use sealed or synthetic surfaces that resist stains and wipe down with a damp cloth.
Why it matters
It suits everyday and travel pieces that pick up marks and need quick cleaning.
UV Resistance
Resistance to fading and drying from sunlight.
What it is
UV resistance is a material's ability to hold colour and suppleness under sun exposure.
Why it matters
It keeps accessories left in cars or by windows from fading and cracking prematurely.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between water resistant and waterproof?
Water resistant means a material fends off light rain and splashes for a while but will eventually let water through. Waterproof means the construction is fully sealed to keep water out entirely, using welded seams or coated fabrics.
Do I need an RFID-protected wallet?
RFID protection blocks contactless cards from being read wirelessly at close range. It adds a layer of security and peace of mind, though real-world skimming is uncommon; many buyers value it simply as a sensible safeguard.
Which materials are most abrasion resistant?
Woven synthetics like ballistic nylon and Cordura lead on abrasion resistance, making them ideal for bags that take hard travel. Among leathers, full-grain and coated saffiano hold up best to daily scuffing.