Benks’ $40 Kevlar Case for iPhone 17 Pro Max Features Hand-Woven Horse Patterns for Lunar New Year

2026 marks the Year of the Horse in the Chinese zodiac cycle, a symbol associated with vitality, independence, and charging ahead without hesitation. Tech companies usually acknowledge this with red packaging and zodiac graphics that disappear by February. Benks decided their limited edition iPhone case should actually reflect what the horse represents: strength, elegance, and refined power. The Knight ArmorAir case uses military-grade Kevlar as its foundation, the same material trusted in aerospace and body armor, then layers in artistic details that transform functional protection into something worth displaying.

The design starts with a deep burgundy Kevlar weave that creates texture through the material itself rather than surface treatments. A lighter champagne-toned pattern forms a running horse across the back, with individual dots creating movement and depth when light hits it from different angles. The camera bump gets the most elaborate treatment, featuring an embossed horse head with flowing mane details inspired by traditional Chinese ornamental metalwork. Rose gold accents on the frame and buttons coordinate with the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s natural titanium finish. It’s a case that works whether you’re celebrating the lunar calendar or just appreciate when limited editions actually bring something new to the table instead of recycling the same festive clichés.

Designer: Benks

The foundation is 1000D DuPont Kevlar, the same aramid fiber family used in bulletproof vests and aerospace components. This material offers tensile strength five times that of steel while weighing considerably less, which is why your phone case can be slim and protective simultaneously. Most people associate Kevlar exclusively with black because that’s its natural woven appearance, but Benks spent years perfecting the dyeing process. They treat the aramid fibers before weaving them, achieving colors like this burgundy base without degrading the material’s protective characteristics.

The champagne horse pattern shows how Benks separates itself from competitors still doing basic Kevlar work. Those lighter dots forming the galloping horse silhouette come from strategic weave density variations rather than printing or painting. Benks essentially programs the weaving pattern to allow more underlying resin exposure in specific areas, creating what looks like pixel art made from industrial fiber. It’s the kind of manufacturing technique that requires custom machinery and tolerance levels most accessory makers won’t bother investing in. The three-dimensional horse head on the camera surround takes this further with actual relief work, meaning it’s sculpted metal rather than flat etching.

The case adds 2mm of thickness total, keeping the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s profile relatively intact while delivering that Kevlar rigidity. MagSafe compatibility maintains 1,200g of magnetic holding force, so wireless charging and accessory attachment work identically to Apple’s official cases. The camera surround raises 1.5mm above the lens surfaces for flat-surface protection. Button cutouts use individual rose gold aluminum inserts instead of silicone pass-throughs, preserving tactile feedback. Benks includes a one-year warranty, which suggests this limited run uses the same construction standards as their permanent lineup rather than cost-cutting for a seasonal release.

The Knight ArmorAir Year of the Horse edition runs $39.99 through Benks’ site and Amazon. That positions it between bargain-bin TPU options and the luxury leather folios that somehow cost more than AppleCare itself. For a limited edition with this level of material engineering and cultural design work, the pricing feels appropriate rather than opportunistic. Whether the horse motif resonates with you culturally or just aesthetically, the case delivers functional protection that doesn’t expire when the zodiac calendar turns over in twelve months.

The post Benks’ $40 Kevlar Case for iPhone 17 Pro Max Features Hand-Woven Horse Patterns for Lunar New Year first appeared on Yanko Design.

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