People have started to accept the iPhone redesign for 2025. As more and more leaks spill the iPhone 17 series renders, we are also starting to get an idea of how these devices look in real life. Today, another set of iPhone 17 Pro images have popped up on the web, giving us an early preview of its case design in multiple colors.
The internet’s initial reaction to this redesign was negative due to some unreliable reports and early concept images. Ever since Mark Gurman’s report on this new design, the iPhone 17 Pro has been spotted twice on the web with case manufacturer leaks, sharing what they think the new iPhones look like.
These new case renders for the iPhone 17 Pro come from Majin Bu. The images show a white-colored device packed into Blue, Green, Black, Beige, and pink protective shells. Those renders confirm Mark Gurman’s earlier report that the Horizontal camera bar will bear the same color as the main color of the device. It won’t be opaque black like some previous concepts suggested.
As you can tell from the images, most of the case makers will leave massive a horizontal cut on top to support the iPhone new Pro model’s camera. Some manufacturers might use a dual cutout on their cases: one for the camera stack and the other for LIDAR, Flash, and Mic.
The case leak reiterates that the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max have three lenses on the left side and the LIDAR/flash combo moved to the other edge. The button layout will be the same as iPhone 16 Pro and an identical cutout will be left in the case for the camera slider.
Revisiting some older design leaks, the X leaker @LusiRoy8 recently shared a picture of a dummy iPhone 17 Pro Max unit, which was enveloped in a plastic case with Apple’s usual MagSafe connection layer on the back. This is a regular transparent iPhone case, but you will notice the huge camera cutout on top, almost the same as today’s renders.
According to new reports, the company plans to upgrade the telephoto with a bigger and higher-res 48MP sensor, which leaves no space for the LIDAR unit on the left side. That’s why Apple is changing the phone’s camera layout and topography. There’s still much to uncover about its specs and design, so stay tuned for further updates.