Not everything will be new at WWDC — Apple is planning to revisit some of its iconic iPhone and Mac wallpapers as part of the latest updates.
The report of retro wallpapers comes from Bloomberg, but there is already a precedent for this. As part of iOS 16 in 2022, Apple brought back the clownfish wallpaper from 2007.
This was the very first iPhone wallpaper ever seen in public, as it was the one on the model that Steve Jobs demonstrated.
Less well-remembered is that the original iPhone also came with a choice of wallpapers that included the Mona Lisa and Vincent Van Gogh’s The Starry Night. Still less memorable options included one with a dot pattern that resembled a miniature game of Twister.
The Mac originally had nothing that could be called a wallpaper or desktop image. Then in System 7, Apple added desktop patterns — and in Mac OS 8 and 9, there came the ability to have images.
But it wasn’t really until OS X came along that Apple began including wallpapers. At first, those OS X images were abstract colors resembling the operating system’s Aqua interface.
Then with Mac OS X Leopard in 2007, the sweeping blue shapes were gone, and a space-themed image was in. It was still a little abstract, though, until OS X Lion when Apple featured an image of a galaxy.
It’s been since the change to naming macOS after places in California that the most famous Mac wallpapers have appeared. We’ve had many mountain ranges and sand dunes — and Apple introduced Dynamic Wallpapers.
These have a dark and a light version, and the Mac can switch between them as the day progresses. This still applies today, even though once Apple moved on to macOS Big Sur, it’s reverted from photos to abstract colors again.
More dramatic and potentially useful dynamic wallpapers exist on the iPhone. Users can have their Lock Screen be a globe that spins around to pinpoint their location on Earth, for instance.
Or there’s a weather wallpaper where the iPhone animates, for instance, clouds moving across the screen.
It’s not known yet whether Apple will actually revive old favorites, like it did with the clownfish, or just have new wallpapers that are in some way reminiscent of the classics. Whatever Apple brings back as part of iOS 18, iPadOS 18, or the next version of macOS, though, it will have to update them for today’s higher resolution screens.
That may be all it does. But 40 years after she designed the icons for the original Mac, it would be fun to see Susan Kare’s work updated to become high-resolution, dynamic wallpapers.