Skip to main content

ColorWare’s $1,600 iPhone 6s Retro recalls the Apple IIe

colorware iphone 6s retro
Bought an iPhone but finding its rose gold or space gray finish just too mainstream and pedestrian these days? ColorWare, the prolific Minnesota-based company perhaps best known for its splashy Mac and iPhone outer skins, is all to happy to help you stand out from the hemogony (but not inexpensively).

ColorWare offers aftermarket makeovers of all degrees of ostentation, but its latest design for the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, Retro, is an understated throwback. It’s a matte mix of beige and brown based on the angular outer shell of the 1983 Apple IIe, and as such features a few unique design touches. Ridges on the left and right sides that mimic airflow vents, and in place of the iPhone’s typically nondescript iconography is the Apple rainbow logo of ’80s and ’90s fame. And also just like a few of Apple’s early computers, the Retro models are rather exclusive: ColorWare’s restricting orders to 50 total (25 for the iPhone 6s and 25 for the iPhone 6s Plus).

Recommended Videos

Sticking out from the iPhone proletariat doesn’t come cheap, though. The unlocked iPhone 6s Retro starts at $1,600; the 6S Plus is $1,700. For ColorWare, that’s about par for the exorbitant course — the company’s last throwback Apple item, the 2014 MacBook Air Retro, was priced at $3,499 (and limited to a 10-model run).

ColorWare textures more than computers, but its other customizations don’t come any cheaper. A stylized PS4 controller runs upwards of $165. One red pair of wireless Beats headphones costs $749. But ColorWare says its manufacturing process is what justifies the premium: Instead of relying on the types of adhesive skins you see in, for example, the checkout line at Best Buy, it applies several layers of custom paint.

Be that as it may, more than a grand for a disco-era iPhone design seems a bit excessive. But if you simply can’t standing bearing the monotony of Apple’s colloquial iPhones, then the Retro edition might be your best bet. After all, what are the chances of running into any of those 24 other equally discerning buyers?

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Let’s be clear, Apple — it’s time to make a transparent iPhone
Deep Purple iPhone 14 Pro with Beats Studio Buds+ in Transparent

Apple has released a new product that's gotten a lot of attention because of an awesome new color option. No, it’s not an iPhone, iPad, or even an Apple Watch. Heck, it’s not even the AirPods Pro 2. So, what am I talking about?

Apple acquired Beats by Dre in 2014, and this week, Beats dropped the new Beats Studio Buds+, which are pretty similar to the AirPods Pro 2, but cost less dough. And they come in one of the coolest colors I’ve seen in a long time: transparent.

Read more
The iPhone 15 Pro cameras may not be as ridiculous as we thought
iPhone 15 Pro CAD render

We’re definitely in iPhone rumor season, as reports have been coming in nonstop. But the latest iPhone 15 Pro report from 9to5Mac seems to corroborate that the mute switch will indeed be replaced with an “Action Button,” and the camera bump may not be as huge as we previously thought.

These new details for the iPhone 15 Pro come from newly detailed CAD renders from MFi (Made for iPhone) accessory makers. This is important to note since accessory makers need to have such information ahead of time in order to produce products to go with the new devices beforehand.

Read more
My least favorite iPhone 14 Pro feature is finally worth using
Dynamic Island Swiggy.

The iPhone 14 Pro is halfway through its reign as the “latest iPhone,” and one of the features that differentiated it from the regular iPhone 14 has only now started getting better. I’m talking about the Dynamic Island, which Apple labels as a “shape-shifting, multitasking, head-turning, game-changing iPhone experience” on its website.

In February, I wrote how the Dynamic Island is good to look at when it’s working, “but five months into its life span, the feature hasn’t caught up to the promises Apple made at launch.”

Read more