This is how I use the double-pinch feature on my Apple Watch Series 7.
Maria Diaz/Apple just launched a lineup of the newiPhone 15 and two new versions of the Apple Watch, theSeries 9 and theUltra 2 . Both Apple Watches wowed Apple's Wonderlust event viewers with one feature: double-tap.
Our collective jaws dropped as we watched how someone could snooze an alarm and navigate their Apple Watch by just making a pinching motion twice, with no need to touch the Watch's display.
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But even with how impressive the S9 SiP in the new Apple Watch is, the truth is that the hand gesture control is already available in older Apple Watch models, as far back as the Apple Watch Series 4 -- it just works differently.
Known as AssistiveTouch, the ability to control your Apple Watch with hand gestures has been an accessibility feature since its birth in WatchOS 8.
High-speed view of navigating the Apple Watch Series 7 with gestures.
Maria Diaz/What you'll need: Apple Watch Series 4 or newer,Apple Watch SE , orApple Watch Ultra , or newer running on the latest version of WatchOS.
On your Apple Watch, open the Settings app.
Open the Apple Watch Settings app on your wearable.
Maria Diaz/Scroll down until you find Accessibility and tap on that.
Right now, hand gestures are an accessibility feature built into WatchOS, so you have to enable it.
Select Accessibility within the Settings app.
Maria Diaz/Within Accessibility, tap on AssistiveTouch and enable it.
Scroll down through the Accessibility features until you find AssistiveTouch.
Maria Diaz/Find Hand Gestures and enable it to turn on the feature. You'll see a list of four hand gestures that the Apple Watch recognizes and have the option to customize what action the Watch will perform when you make the gesture.
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Here are the four hand gestures that the AssistiveTouch capability recognizes:
Make sure Hand Gestures is enabled.
Maria Diaz/Start making the hand gestures shown in the AssistiveTouch options to test out your new ways to navigate your Apple Watch.
The different gestures that can trigger an action in your Apple Watch.
Maria Diaz/AssistiveTouch was born as an accessibility feature. It gives people who can't always touch the screen of their Apple Watch the ability to control the wearable with the same hand wearing it. As a result, it can also leverage other hand gestures to control the Watch, like one tap of the pointer finger and thumb and fist clenching once or twice in quick succession, not just double tap.
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The double-tap gesture from the Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 lets users control the primary button in an app, open the Smart Stack from the watch face, and scroll through widgets; the last action would require a different gesture with AssistiveTouch. We'll learn more about the double-tap feature when it becomes available in a software update next month, especially how responsive it is and what other capabilities it offers.
The double-tap gesture isn't built as an Accessibility feature like AssistiveTouch is, though it can act as one. Instead, the double-tap gesture is built to easily and intuitively navigate the Apple Watch, similar to the Apple Vision Pro's experience.