Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

Apple’s Black Unity watch band looks great and supports a good cause

Add as a preferred source on Google

It’s almost February, which, for most people, means pink and red hearts for Valentine’s Day. But there’s more to February than that — February is Black History Month. To commemorate the occasion, Apple released a brand new Black Unity band for the Apple Watch. In 2021, the Black Unity band was in the Sport Band style, while 2022’s version was the Braided Solo Loop. For 2023, Apple went with the Sport Loop style.

We got our hands on the new 2023 Black Unity Sport Loop band, and here’s a closer look at it.

Recommended Videos

Inspired by the creative power of mosaics

Apple Black Unity watch band unboxed
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

This year’s particular Black Unity band is, according to Apple, “inspired by the creative process of mosaic, symbolizing the vibrancy of Black communities and the power of unity.” With the Black Unity Sport Loop, “Unity” is spelled on the band (and a cool card inside the box) through black, green, and red interweaved nylon threads.

Though it appears to have yellow on the band, there’s actually no yellow at all — the illusion of yellow is made by combining the red and green threads together. The solid black nylon weave sections help form the lettering, with combinations of black/green, red/green, and black/red forming the rest of the letter blocks. The solid black sections are also raised slightly above the rest, creating a kind of three-dimensional texture on the band.

The underside of the band is solid black, one edge has a green thread, and the other edge has red. The lugs are matte black, making this band pair nicely with a graphite or black Apple Watch (I’m using mine with my Space Black Titanium Apple Watch Series 5).

Same great Sport Loop comfort

It’s been a while since I’ve used a Sport Loop, but it’s one of the most comfortable Apple Watch bands that Apple sells. I really enjoy the fact that it’s easy to get it on your wrist, and th at the loop is easily adjustable for all wrist sizes. Plus, the Velcro closure is super easy, and barely an inconvenience.

Apple also provides three watch faces for Black Unity — one watch face to go with each year’s Black Unity band. This year’s Unity Mosaic watch face joins the Unity Lights (2022) and Unity (2021) from the previous Black Unity band releases. While these watch faces match the bands, I dislike that I can’t have any complications to display on them.

Overall, the Black Unity Sport Loop looks good and lets you show your support for a greater cause. Plus, the Sport Loop is one of the most comfortable Apple Watch band styles for casual wear and workouts, so if you haven’t tried that style yet, go get one.

Christine Romero-Chan
Christine Romero-Chan has been writing about technology, specifically Apple, for over a decade. She graduated from California…
Xreal Aura glasses put Android on your face and they will “try” to cost under $1,500
Xreal Aura tries to squeeze a whole XR headset into glasses
Person wearing Xreal Project Aura smart glasses.

Xreal Aura is now one step closer to landing on your face. The company has opened reservations for Xreal Aura, its Android XR-powered smart glasses built with Google. The device was previously known as Project Aura, and it is shaping up to be one of the most important early tests for Android XR beyond full headset hardware.

Xreal is marketing Aura as a portable spatial computing device in a glasses-style form factor. So it's more than just a simple pair of glasses that records or keeps track of your notifications. Aura combines lightweight glasses with a dedicated compute puck, letting the heavier processing and battery hardware sit off your face.

Read more
Samsung Display just showed why XR’s future may come down to better tiny screens
Its AWE USA lineup connects high-brightness OLEDoS, MR demos, and glasses-free 3D concepts into one bigger bet.
Galaxy XR

Samsung Display is using AWE 2026 to push RGB OLEDoS as a core building block for the next wave of XR hardware. The showcase centers on displays designed for mixed reality headsets and augmented reality smart glasses, where brightness, size, and efficiency all collide.

The standout spec is a 1.3-inch RGB OLEDoS panel rated at 40,000 nits. Samsung Display is presenting it in a dark-room Big Dipper installation, where only two of seven panels use the ultra-bright tech to make the brightness and color gap obvious. It’s a booth demo with a sharper message underneath.

Read more
Got a smartwatch? You can now join a study measuring how the football world cup is affecting your heart
Your World Cup heartbreak might be valuable smartwatch data now
Heart rate on the Apple Watch Series 7.

Watching the World Cup can be an intense (and fun) affair that makes your heart race. And now, your smartwatch could be ready to track just how worked up you got over your favorite team winning or losing. Researchers at Bielefeld University are inviting football fans to join the World Cup Fever Study, a project that uses smartwatch and fitness tracker data to measure how fans physically respond to matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The study is looking at heart rate, stress levels, movement, and sleep to understand how football events like goals, wins, losses, and tense moments show up in the body.

Read more