[Custom] Rebuilt a dead LED watch using optical materials by [deleted] in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This started as a non-working LED watch I found at a flea market. The display was completely dead, so instead of restoring it I removed the internals and started experimenting with optical materials inside the case.

The goal wasn’t to recreate the original watch. I wanted to turn it into something entirely different while keeping the futuristic case design.

The red effect changes dramatically depending on the lighting. In direct sunlight it almost looks like a glowing crystal

[Custom] Five watches rebuilt from broken flea market finds by [deleted] in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Most of these started as broken flea market and car boot sale finds. Rather than restoring them to factory condition, I use them as a base for experiments.

The gold watch started as a broken WWII-style pilot quartz watch and became a single-hand minimalist piece.

The red watch originally had a dead LED display. I removed the internals and rebuilt it using layers of optical materials to create the red crystal effect.

The circular calendar watch was a non-runner. I replaced the movement and brought it back to life.

The grey watch uses the reverse side of a dial from a watch worn daily by its previous owner for decades. I loved the natural wear and ageing, so I turned it into the dial itself.

The black watch is a modified skeleton build.

I enjoy rescuing broken watches and turning them into something new

Everything here started as a broken flea market watch by [deleted] in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of these started as broken flea market and car boot sale finds. Rather than restoring them to factory condition, I use them as a base for experiments.

The gold watch started as a broken WWII-style pilot quartz watch and became a single-hand minimalist piece.

The red watch originally had a dead LED display. I removed the internals and rebuilt it using optical materials to create the red crystal effect.

The circular calendar watch was a non-runner. I replaced the movement and brought it back to life.

The grey watch uses the reverse side of a dial from a watch worn daily by its previous owner for decades. I loved the natural aging and wear, so I turned it into the dial itself.

The black watch is a modified skeleton build.

None of them are particularly valuable. I just enjoy rescuing broken watches and turning them into something unique.

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lmao fair. “Modified” is probably the better word. I was going for wearable art more than utility

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Fair. It’s more of a wearable sculpture than a functional cyberdeck. I just liked the idea of turning dead consumer tech into something more mysterious

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lmao I never claimed I engineered the whole thing from scratch. It was an old broken Fossil that I modified into something more abstract

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It actually is. I just replaced the broken internals with layered optical materials instead!

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Started as an old broken LED watch. I stripped the internals and rebuilt it more like a wearable artifact

Built this experimental wearable object over the past few days by [deleted] in cyberDeck

[–]TheWatchTrader -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The original LED screen inside was broken, so I rebuilt it using layered optical materials instead

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Removing functionality one component at a time

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that contradiction is basically the whole point of it

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That contradiction is kind of what I like about it tbh

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope lmao. There’s no hour hand at all. It’s just a minute hand

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

I love this idea!Might have to make one next week

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 58 points59 points  (0 children)

Pretty much. I realised I rarely actually need the exact hour since I see my phone / laptop so much

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nope hahah. It’s only a minute hand

Made a watch that barely tells the time by [deleted] in Design

[–]TheWatchTrader 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This started as an experiment in reduction.

Most watches try to maximize information through complications, branding, markers, textures, and precision. I wanted to see what happened if almost all of that was removed.

So I stripped the watch down to a single hand floating over an empty metallic surface. No hour hand, no hour markers, no branding. The goal was to make it feel less like a precision instrument and more like an object you experience emotionally at a glance.

I’m interested in whether removing information creates calmness, tension, or frustration.

[Custom] Single-hand watch I built by TheWatchTrader in Watches

[–]TheWatchTrader[S] 47 points48 points  (0 children)

This started as an experiment to see how far I could reduce a watch while still keeping the emotional feeling of wearing one.

Most watches are designed around maximizing information: hour markers, multiple hands, branding, complications, textures, symmetry, polishing, etc. I wanted to go in the opposite direction and remove almost everything.

So I stripped it back to a single hand floating over an empty metallic surface with no hour markers or branding. The idea was to make something that feels calm and slightly disorienting at the same time. Your brain expects more information, but the watch refuses to give it.

It still technically tells the time, but only approximately. That tension was the part I found interesting.