logo
It's cute, it's candy-colored, it costs $10. How COVID anxiety helped make hand sanitizer the 'it' accessory for kids.

It's cute, it's candy-colored, it costs $10. How COVID anxiety helped make hand sanitizer the 'it' accessory for kids.

Yahoo2 days ago
Touchland's sanitizing spritz is a status symbol. You can thank the pandemic.
Hannah Picinich of Leonardtown, Md., estimates her family has 'probably 20' hand sanitizers. 'I have four kids' — ages 10, 8 and 4-year-old twins — so between them, Picinich and her husband, the sanitizers are 'everywhere,' she tells Yahoo.
One for each kid. Two for each car. Multiple bottles scattered around the house for guests. 'It's in my purse and my work bag,' Picinich adds. 'Every store we go to, every time we leave,' the kids know to use and bring sanitizer along. And recently, Picinich's children — all girls — have been asking for one brand in particular: Touchland.
After an exponential surge in 2020 — sales for Purell, for example, grew by 600% that year — the market for hand sanitizers has grown steadily. Touchland, a personal care company founded in Spain that made its U.S. debut in 2018, has emerged as a trendy frontrunner in the sanitizer wars: 'The Latest Teen Status Symbol Is $10 Hand Sanitizer,' reported the Wall Street Journal in February. 'Touchland is the only hand sanitizer worth using,' NBC Select proclaimed a month later. The brand, which also sells body mists, has more than a million combined followers across TikTok and Instagram. Searches for 'Touchland' on social media turn up tens of thousands of results — many of them product shots highlighting the brand's bright, colorful packaging and fragrances (Frosted Mint, Vanilla Blossom, etc.). In Picinich's experience, the branding is effective: Even her younger children request Touchland as a treat when they are given money to spend on something fun at the store.
And it is fun, says Angie Meltsner, ​​founder of the consumer and cultural insights agency Tomato Baby. Brands like Touchland (and Bath & Body Works, which sells its own array of covetable hand sanitizers) deploy alluring colors and fragrances to help consumers build identity. Collectible versions — in Touchland's case, collaborations with kid-friendly brands, including Disney, Hello Kitty and Crocs (which is already sold out) — add to the hype. Meltsner also points to Touchland's 'playful' logo — a hand wearing a smile with the suggestion that the experience of touch is one to be embraced. 'Hand sanitizer is very hygienic and medicinal,' she tells Yahoo — consider the clinical simplicity of Purell's design — but Touchland's use of cheerful aesthetics and smell is an intentional way to engage consumer senses. It allows shoppers to participate in different moods and occasions, and facilitates opportunities 'for collecting and trading and aligning with your friends,' Meltsner says.
Of course, children and teens are desperate for alignment. A 2021 study found that kids as young as 3 prioritize opportunities to 'fit in' with their peers over their own preferences. And while Touchland's successful climb to the top as an 'it' accessory was initially fueled by luck and design, it's retained its foothold in the marketplace by continuing to be the cool kid's sanitizer of choice. While Picinich might grumble about the price compared to drugstore brands — a 1 fl. oz. Power Mist starts at $10 — she knows she's paying for more than just sanitizer as far as her daughters are concerned. 'I buy it for them, because I want them to feel included,' the mom of four says.
The pandemic simply turned up the volume. Though practicing good hand hygiene has always been part of life for parents — especially those with kids under 7, an age group both notoriously filthy and frequently ill — many clearly identify COVID as a turning point in their habits. A small Canadian survey conducted in 2021, for instance, found that children were applying hand sanitizer up to 25 times per day.
It was around that time that Picinich's twins were delivered prematurely at just under 30 weeks. 'When I had my oldest, I always was cleaning things,' she remembers, 'but then when I had Olive and Lucia, and they were born early, I was a freak about making sure everything was clean. Hand sanitizer was how I did that, mostly.'
Heather Boneparth, a writer and mom of two from New Jersey, remembers feeling similarly desperate for control. Trapped at home in 2020 with two children — the youngest of whom was growing more mobile by the day — she found herself in 'full-blown, high-touch parenting,' Boneparth tells Yahoo. Using hand sanitizer made her feel like she was doing something — anything — to keep her family healthy and protect those around her. 'It wasn't just the fear of me or my child getting sick … it was the threat of disruption to our daily life,' she says. In the Northeast, states like Boneparth's continued COVID mitigation measures (and a bit of hygiene theater) long after the initial first year of the pandemic, especially with regard to day care centers and schools. Not keeping germs at bay meant risking a sick (even if just a run-of-the-mill cold) child who would have to stay home for days, throwing parents' work schedules into chaos.
Boneparth's sanitizing habits have persisted even as COVID has waned. Recently, her oldest daughter, who is now 9, started requesting to specifically carry Touchland's sanitizer. Boneparth is thrilled. 'It's giving Bath & Body Works,' she gushes, 'and to me, it's a win, because she gets to start exploring this world of beauty and wellness — and there's some health benefit to it.'
Dr. Jalan Burton, the lead physician and CEO of Healthy Home Pediatrics in Washington, D.C., loves the shift toward improved hand hygiene overall. She worries, though, about the replacement of handwashing with sanitizing and the reduced efficacy of that practice. If you 'don't have access to a sink,' she says, or 'you've been playing at the park,' the convenience of a travel-size hand sanitizer is great. But this isn't as effective as handwashing in many contexts, and some of the benefit of soap and water is in the act of physically scrubbing and rinsing the particles away.
Burton is also concerned about the families most likely to be swayed by persuasive packaging and strategic messaging — namely, those who had traumatic experiences during the height of the COVID pandemic.
For her part, Touchland's founder and CEO, Andrea Lisbona, acknowledged to Glossy in 2023 that 'personal care usually sells through fear.' But she added that her company's 'goal is to do the opposite and empower people to live to the fullest and create solutions that people are excited to carry with them.' (Representatives for Touchland declined to comment for this story.)
Is Touchland selling something that's cute and brings a sense of comfort but is perhaps overhyped and overpriced too? 'Yeah,' says Boneparth, but she's happy her daughter wants to carry it in her bag. Even if post-COVID anxiety is fueling the craze, 'the benefit outweighs any concern that they're preying on a young demographic,' she adds. 'It feels like a good compromise that checks a lot of boxes.'
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slip as Wall Street braces for trade deadline, jobs report
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slip as Wall Street braces for trade deadline, jobs report

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slip as Wall Street braces for trade deadline, jobs report

US stock futures slipped as investors digested the latest Big Tech earnings ahead of a pivotal Friday, with President Trump's deadline for trade deals and the July jobs report both on deck. Futures attached to the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) ticked down 0.1%. Futures attached to the benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F) fell 0.2%. Futures attached to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) slumped 0.3%. Only select US trading partners have managed to negotiate trade agreements ahead of Trump's self-imposed Aug 1. deadline, leaving many countries facing the prospect of blanket tariff rates as soon as midnight. Trump announced on Thursday that Mexico would get a 90-day extension of the tariff pause currently in place, and revealed a flurry of other deals and demands in the countdown to Friday. Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs Apple (AAPL) and Amazon (AMZN) reported their earnings after the bell Thursday. Apple stock rose after its results beat expectations, boosted by surprisingly strong iPhone sales. Amazon's report also exceeded expectations, but the performance of its cloud business caused its stock to tumble. Stocks fell in day trading Thursday, weighed down by an inflation report showing rising prices as well as uncertainty around the looming end to the tariff pause. A rollercoaster week on Wall Street is set to end not just with trade turmoil but also with the arrival of the July jobs report, a key indicator of US economic health. The data is expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment ticked higher. Sign in to access your portfolio

Trump increases tariff on Canada to 35%, White House says
Trump increases tariff on Canada to 35%, White House says

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump increases tariff on Canada to 35%, White House says

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday increasing tariffs on Canadian goods to 35% from 25%, the White House said. The new rates goes into effect on August 1. "In response to Canada's continued inaction and retaliation, President Trump has found it necessary to increase the tariff on Canada from 25% to 35% to effectively address the existing emergency," the White House said.

Saylor's New $4.2 Billion Bitcoin Plan Aims to Reassure Skeptics
Saylor's New $4.2 Billion Bitcoin Plan Aims to Reassure Skeptics

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Saylor's New $4.2 Billion Bitcoin Plan Aims to Reassure Skeptics

(Bloomberg) -- Michael Saylor isn't backing down. The Strategy co-founder is preparing to sell $4.2 billion more in preferred stock to fuel his latest Bitcoin bet — while throwing a lifeline to investors worried he's diluting them into oblivion. The World's Data Center Capital Has Residents Surrounded An Abandoned Art-Deco Landmark in Buffalo Awaits Revival We Should All Be Biking Along the Beach Budapest's Most Historic Site Gets a Controversial Rebuild San Francisco in Talks With Vanderbilt for Downtown Campus The plan, unveiled with second-quarter earnings on Thursday, is Saylor's latest answer to the big question hanging over his stock: how long can he keep using a lofty premium to fund ever-larger Bitcoin buys? To reassure shareholders, Strategy pledged it won't issue new common shares at less than 2.5 times its net asset value, except to cover debt interest or preferred dividends. At the same time, Saylor will keep tapping the market 'opportunistically' when the premium is high, turning equity sales into fresh Bitcoin buys. The move does two things at once: it locks in a floor aimed at reassuring any skeptical shareholders and arms the company with a larger war chest to keep buying Bitcoin. It's a double play that pits Saylor directly against hedge fund managers like Jim Chanos, who have been betting the company's premium will collapse. 'That would put common shareholders who are concerned about potential dilution at ease,' said Brian Dobson, managing director for Disruptive Technology Equity Research at the brokerage firm Clear Street. 'The market is reacting positively to Strategy's equity products. The demand is there as evidenced by their substantial capital raises.' It's the latest in a string of financial maneuvers that have transformed a once-obscure software firm into a leveraged Bitcoin proxy. The dual move showcases Saylor's mastery of capital markets during these bullish digital-asset times: using a self-imposed floor to placate critics, while simultaneously arming the company with fresh ammunition to keep buying Bitcoin. The company - which is known formally as MicroStrategy Inc. — has already raised more than $10 billion this year through stock and structured offerings, feeding a balance sheet now holding $74 billion in Bitcoin. Its stock has surged 3,300% since Saylor's first crypto purchase, outpacing Bitcoin itself and forcing hedge funds into a high-stakes battle over whether his premium-fueled strategy can last. Since Strategy's first Bitcoin purchase in 2020, Saylor has sold equity, issued various types of debt and layered stacks of preferred shares on top. In the process, he has encouraged a fleet of imitators and spurred a new industry of public companies following a so-called treasury strategy dedicated to buying and holding cryptocurrencies. Good Times Since Strategy trades so far above the value of its Bitcoin, the company can sell stock at rich levels, buy more Bitcoin, and in turn reinforce that premium. It's a reflexive loop that critics warn would snap if sentiment shifts. For now, Saylor's ability to turn equity markets into a Bitcoin funding engine has made his firm both a proxy for the cryptocurrency and a pressure point for critics betting the spread will collapse. The company reiterated that it registered an unrealized gain of about $14 billion in the second quarter. After factoring in deferred taxes, the Bitcoin treasury company had net income of $10 billion, or $32.60 a share, the firm said in a statement. The eye-catching benefit, first disclosed at the start of the month, was due to a rebound in Bitcoin's price and a recent accounting change. Demand for offerings can fluctuate depending on Bitcoin prices. The firm had to sweeten one of its earlier preferred stock offerings this year with a steep discount to win over price‑sensitive buyers. Just last week the company launched a new kind of preferred stock, dubbed Stretch, that was upsized from $500 million to more than $2 billion. It was yet another move that showed how deftly Saylor can turn financial engineering into crypto firepower. For now at least. 'Strategy's upsize is a huge reflection on the market demand for its Stretch Preferred Stock offering,' said Tyler Evans, co-founder and chief investment officer of UTXO Management. 'They have had similar upsizes from previous preferred stock offerings, but this one is an eye-popping number.' --With assistance from Kirk Ogunrinde. Burning Man Is Burning Through Cash Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Everyone Loves to Hate Wind Power. Scotland Found a Way to Make It Pay Off It's Not Just Tokyo and Kyoto: Tourists Descend on Rural Japan Cage-Free Eggs Are Booming in the US, Despite Cost and Trump's Efforts ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store