Everyday Objects

Why Do Hoodies Have Metal Tips on Strings?

Those little metal tips on your drawstrings have a name, a very specific job, and a history that goes back to ancient Rome.

Quick answer

The metal or plastic tips at the end of hoodie drawstrings are called aglets. The word comes from the Latin 'acus,' meaning needle. Aglets do two things. First, they bind the end of the cord, preventing it from fraying or unravelling when pulled. A raw fabric cord end fluffs and splits with repeated use, quickly becoming impossible to thread. Second, they act as a threading tool. When a drawstring is pulled out — especially during washing — you need to feed it back through the narrow channel inside the hood. The rigid, tapered aglet acts exactly like the eye of a needle, making this easy. Without it, threading a soft cord end through a tight fabric tunnel is genuinely difficult.

Close-up of hoodie drawstring with metal aglet tip

They are called aglets

The term comes from the Latin 'acus' (needle). Aglets have been used on laces and cords for over 2,000 years.

They prevent fraying

The metal or plastic tip binds the cord end, stopping it from unravelling with repeated pulling and washing.

They are threading tools

The rigid, tapered tip allows you to guide the drawstring back through the hood channel after it has been pulled out.

Myth: they are purely decorative

The metallic finish looks like styling — but the function predates the fashion by thousands of years.

Aglets Are an Ancient Solution to a Persistent Problem

The problem of cord ends fraying is as old as woven fabric. Roman sandal laces, medieval doublet ties, and Renaissance hose all used aglets made from metal, bone, or glass to bind cord ends and allow threading through eyelets.

Before metal aglets, cords were often dipped in wax or wrapped in thread to stiffen the end — the same functional goal achieved differently.

The modern plastic or aluminium aglet on a hoodie is solving exactly the same problem with cheaper materials and faster manufacturing.

Myth vs Reality

Myth

Metal aglets are a fashion choice to make drawstrings look more premium

Shiny metal tips do look like a deliberate styling element, especially on branded hoodies.

Reality

Aglets exist for function — styling is secondary

The aglet predates fashion hoodies by millennia. The metal finish is an aesthetic choice applied on top of a functional requirement that cannot be removed.

Plastic vs Metal vs Heat-Sealed Aglets

Plastic
Most common on budget and mid-range hoodies. Lightweight, cheap, and functional.
Metal
Used on premium garments. More durable, heavier, and considered more aesthetically refined.
Heat-sealed
Cord end melted and fused on synthetic drawstrings. No separate piece — the cord itself becomes the aglet.
Wax-dipped
Historical method still occasionally used on natural-fibre cords. Less durable than metal or plastic.

Note

When an aglet falls off, the string usually follows

Once the tip is gone, the cord end begins to fray with every pull. The threads spread and the end quickly becomes too wide to rethread through the hood channel. Replacing or re-sealing the aglet early saves the drawstring.

Quick answers

Common questions

What are the metal tips on hoodie strings called?

They are called aglets — a word derived from the Latin for needle. The same term applies to the tips on shoelaces.

Why do drawstrings have metal tips?

To prevent the cord end from fraying and to provide a rigid tip for threading the string back through the hood channel.

Are aglets just decorative?

No. The function predates the fashion by thousands of years. Metal finishes look styled, but the aglet's core job is structural.

What do I do when an aglet falls off?

You can replace it with a metal aglet crimped on with pliers, wrap the end tightly with thin tape, or melt the end slightly if the cord is synthetic.