‘Spare Time’ watch shuffles digits when shaken.
May 20th, 2013
Design submited by Gordon from the USA.
Gordon says: The name of this watch is “Spare Time”
Oh no, I dropped my watch and there are pieces everywhere.
Design submited by Gordon from the USA.
Gordon says: The name of this watch is “Spare Time”
Oh no, I dropped my watch and there are pieces everywhere.
Design submitted by Peter from the UK.
Peter says: This is Discus, a back-to-basics disc style analogue watch. The styling is influenced by retro sci-fi as well as more modern sci-fi films. I wanted to design a disc analogue watch that was in theory easy to make but still looked exciting.
Design submitted by Peter from the UK.
Peter says: I have submitted a few analogue designs in the past and most were perhaps a little too imaginative. They tended to be technically un-feasible and required expensive bespoke mechanisms to allow them to work. For this concept I decided to go back to basics and use a traditional disc style analogue time telling using similar construction to “Uzumaki”
Design submitted by Albert from Poland.
Albert says: Timetri is an idea of graphics watchface which looks like it’s come from a sci-fi movie.
It expresses time by four groups of triangles, representing hours, tens of minutes and single minutes. The time of day can be gathered from the position of the white triangle (down for AM and up for PM). Read the rest of this entry »
Design submitted by Clarence-Junius from the USA.
Clarence-Junius says: As an artist I use the color wheel a lot which inspired me to use that as a theme for this design. The vivid hues of a color wheel would look great as a time piece.
Design submitted by Anders from Sweden.
Anders says: Sketching display layouts, I hit upon the idea of dividing an LED display by running wires above it. After refining the idea I had this; Cage. The display comprises 5 rows of 9 LED segments, telling time in the good old 12-5-9 format.
Design submitted by Patrick from France.
Patrick says: I stumbled upon a project that I submitted in September 2010 and the second version also proposed end of September 2010, but never published because certainly it was not formatted for the blog? (I of course adapted the format, with the technical constraints of Blog)
Design submitted by Firdaus from Malaysia.
Firdaus says: GAMERZ watch design is inspired by gaming rigs; those gaming PC case, gaming notebook, gaming mouse & keyboard etc. It is a combination of LCD and LED time telling in a watch. On idle (LCD) mode, user can tell the time without pressing a button as the time is always on. This is very useful when on driving or during outdoor under direct sunlight. Indoor and during night time, the hybrid (LCD+LED) mode will make the watch more appealing to enjoy.
Design submitted by Czarina from the USA.
Czarina says: I was actually in the middle of researching Kisai’s product line for a school project when I learned that some of the watches were made by fans. Inspired, I started coming up with my own space themed designs, until I finally decided that “Orion” best represented my personal style.
Design submitted by Peter from the UK.
Peter says: A lot of watches have a bezel, some have it for practical reasons like for measuring a set period of time. Most however are just a styling element. The nice thing with most is that they often add a little detail and a tactile quality. I decided to use the bezel as the time telling feature of this design.
Design submitted by Clement from Singapore.
Clement says: I was thinking that watches nowadays are looking so sleek and machined. Not that this is bad, but somehow they just lack the human touch.
My design is based off a woven friendship bracelet.
Design submitted by Dimitar & Nikolay from Bulgaria.
Dimitar & Nikolay say: I was interested lately in ancient civilisations and their architecture, science, calendars, graphic system. So I thought it would be nice to have a face watch that resembles of an ancient calendar or number system because they always have their own continuity and circles like some kind of a reminder that life never ends.
Design submitted by Patrick from France.
Patrick says: An update to the original Twist Watch design.
Design submitted by Matthew from the USA.
Matthew says: I came up with this concept while I was working on another concept. I started to play around with the logo. I cropped off the top part of the logo, and placed it basically right next to the bottom half. This gave me the inspiration of creating a design that can be easily read, while the top half of the number is sliced from the bottom half of the number.
Design submitted by Valentin from the USA.
Valentin says: I have always wanted a bracelet-watch. one that looks exactly like a bracelet but can still tell time. uniquely.