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

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple just dropped a new watch band and wallpapers for Pride 2025

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple Pride 2025 collection.
Apple

Apple just announced its “2025 Pride Collection,” which includes a new Sport Band for Apple Watch, a dynamic watch face, and a dynamic wallpaper that will be available for iOS and iPadOS. The watch band is available to order from today and the watch face/wallpapers will drop in upcoming software updates.

Apple has been releasing special edition watch bands for Pride Month for almost a decade now, each with a different take on the rainbow/multicolored design. This year’s is pretty straightforward, making use of bold stripes of color just like actual pride flags.

Recommended Videos

The watch face has a shifting animation that circles through the different colors in a diagonal direction. Apple says the stripes shift to form numerals when a wearer lifts their arm to look at the watch — but if those numerals are showing on the little animation posted on the blog then, awkwardly, I can’t see them.

The iPhone and iPad versions of the background shift whenever you move, lock, or unlock your device. We’ll get access to the wallpapers and watch face with watchOS 11.5, iOS 18.5, and iPadOS 18.5. There’s no macOS version of the wallpaper but that isn’t too surprising since previous years haven’t included one either.

The Sport Band is made out of silicon, with each color mixed separately and then compression-molded together. It’s probably the best material choice for such a brightly colored design because it’s so easy to keep clean and it doesn’t really wear down. There’s nothing worse than buying something for the color and seeing it get dirtied and faded within a year.

And this probably is the brightest design Apple has released in the past few years — 2024’s Braided Solo Loop had quite a lot of dark colors involved, while 2023’s Sport Band was more understated with a white background. The two Pride Sport Loop editions from 2022 were almost pastel-colored compared to this year’s design.

If you like the look of it, you can order the watch band now for $49, and remember to look out for the wallpapers when the new updates drop.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
Apple’s next AirPods could give Siri eyes, and they’re already being tested
Camera-equipped AirPods could give Siri the comeback it badly needs
Apple Airpods Pro 3 Official

AI is still something most people have to consciously engage with. You open an app, type a prompt, take a photo, or ask a question. Apple’s next major AirPods upgrade could change that. According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, the company is in late-stage development on camera-equipped earbuds that could put visual AI into a device that many people already use every day.

How close are these AI AirPods to launch?

Read more
Google’s Fitbit Air is a screenless $99 Whoop rival, and its core features don’t need a subscription
The real competitive edge Fitbit Air has is that Google separated the hardware cost from the subscription entirely, giving users something Whoop never has: a choice about whether to pay monthly at all.
Fitbit Air in all the colors.

Google just made its most serious moves yet into the fitness tracker market. The maker of the Pixel Watch has officially unveiled the Fitbit Air, a screenless health band priced at $99.99. Unlike Whoop, which locks all the fitness data behind a paywall, Fitbit Air’s core health-tracking features will remain free. 

Currently available for pre-orders, the device will start shipping across 21 countries starting May 26, 2026. You can get the tracker in four Pixel-like colors, including Obsidian, Lavender, Fog, and Berry, and choose from three different strap styles: Performance Loop, Active Band, and Elevated Modern Band. 

Read more
The privacy nightmare of smart glasses turns real as victim filmed and extorted
A smart glasses filming scandal shows how ugly wearable cameras can get
Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 Smart Glasses

Smart glasses have always had an obvious privacy concern, and a new BBC investigation just showed us why. A woman identified as Alice was approached by a man in a London shopping centre while he was wearing smart glasses. She thought it was a normal interaction and did not realize she was being recorded. The footage was later uploaded online and viewed around 40,000 times.

Where everything went wrong

Read more