I had assumed with a name like Singer on it, it would be a product that is well-designed for people who sew. But, the cap on large one slides right off, with no place on other end to store it, so it has no protective cap, falls off in sewing kit, with point sticking out. Not great if you have it stored in a plastic bag in the sewing machine, as it can poke holes. The cap on small one just barely holds onto it, not even a click when it's in place, comes off way too easily, and like the other one, not thoughtfully designed, as no place on other end to stick the cap (you know, as with good design of Bic stick pens) so you don't lose it. The grip is nothing special. Sad how a decades-old brand name gets used on this nothing-special seam ripper. I will buy stuff like this in person from fabric stores in future, where I can handle it, not online. I bought some Singer scissors which are pretty nice, not top-of-line German ones, but decent. And I have good memories of the old Singer machines, made with metal parts, not plastic, built to last many decades. Oh, well. These seam rippers do work, and though cap and handle are nothing great, the business end seems to be good. I guess that's what matters most, not whether you stick your finger on cap-less point tool when reaching in sewing tools bag. Just kinda curious who makes well-designed seam rippers & similar tools nowadays? German brands, or does Husqvarna make one? It seems like a little thing, but it's nice to have really good tools, when you work with them a lot. Maybe I can make my own cap for it, and dip the handle in cushiony tooldip?