My iPhone 15 Pro Max is missing the one thing that made my old iPhone 13 Pro so appealing

The word “Patina” is nice to say, but it’s not a word I thought I would associate with an iPhone. Patina is the attractive softening effect of materials, especially metals, that discolour due to aging and exposure. It’s the green layer over copper that gives the Statue of Liberty a distinctive look, and it gives the copper top plate of a Leica camera a satisfying look of natural wear.

After switching to the rather impressive iPhone 15 Pro Max earlier this year, time was called for when packing up my venerable iPhone 13 Pro as I packed it up to be sent to my colleagues in the suitably patinated historic city of Bath. During this process, my iPhone caught the light pouring in from the office windows on one of the rare sunny days London can enjoy.

That electromagnetic radiation radiated 90 million miles from Earth’s nearest star, playing off the stainless steel sides of my old iPhone. A cacophony of metallic hues and colors blossomed on the sides of the iPhone 13 Pro: a pleasant mix of purple, blue, silver, and an almost bronze hue.

(Image credit: Future)

This wasn’t the first time I noticed the rainbow discoloration on the aging stainless steel iPhone chassis, but after six months of using the titanium-embraced iPhone 15 Pro Max, things changed. While nice and light and soft to the touch, Apple’s best premium iPhone lacks patina potential.