Design submitted by Lloyd from Australia.
Lloyd says: “Play” is an LCD concept watch that displays the time and date using symbols resembling those found on DVD players and other modern gadgets.
Design submitted by Lloyd from Australia.
Lloyd says: “Play” is an LCD concept watch that displays the time and date using symbols resembling those found on DVD players and other modern gadgets.
Design submitted by Mark from New Zealand.
Mark says: “Archaeologists have discovered an ancient runic inscription on a piece of stone ballast in the preserved remains of an unearthed longship revealing that not only did the master rune that all runes are created from was used to write words, but also used to tell the time with each rune representing an hour of the day”.
Design submitted by Peter from the UK.
I wanted to come up with a very simple LED watch that uses easily recognizable digital numbers for quick time reading while looking abstract and cryptic the majority of the time.
Design submitted by Christian from the USA.
Christian says: I liked the idea of surrounding, closing-in on the hour–like a mouth. The name DevHour then wrote itself.
Design submitted by Sam of Borg.
Sam says: This watch is inspired by the Borg stasis alkoven displays used in Star Trek. The were so called plasma discs used as sophisticated stand-by lights for sleeping Borg – cybernetic aliens.
Design submitted by Sam from Germany.
Sam says: My idea for UNION was to unify all digits of the time display, that are the same, to save numbers and to create an interesting look. For example a 22 would become a big 2. This is where the fun started.
Design submitted by Laszlo from Hungary.
Laszlo says: LCD or LED watch with time and date function.
Imagine a square, slice it to 9 equal parts. On every common side make a segment. They are the numbers 1-9. Cryptic at first glance but logical.
Design submitted by Sam from Germany.
Sam says: NEON IO is a display concept, that came to being while working on the NEON concept. Instead of the classical 2×2 array, I’m using an inside-out display. Since the numbers are hollow, there is enough space in them to contain another number.
Design submitted by Talgat from Kyrgyzstan.
Talgat says: I wanted to create hours with the Roman figures, to connect it modern design. that is two times (past and future)
Design submitted by Heather from the USA.
I was inspired by an older blog entry posted by Tokyoflash that used two colors of LEDs to count the time: http://www.tokyoflash.com/blog/2010/02/time-to-streamline/ The Retro-bot LED watch concept is meant to be similar to the classic Tokyoflash watches, but instead of using counting to tell the time, the display shows a distorted version of the digital time.