Most watchfaces show you the hour. This one speeds it up.
The large clock runs on 15-minute hours: each hour lasts a
quarter of the usual length, so the day races by four times
faster. Real 02:35 reads as 10:05, and the hour count climbs
all the way to 95 before midnight resets it. Its minutes only
ever run 00-14, since the hour itself is that much shorter.
Why 15 minutes? Because an hour is too big a bucket - it's easy
to fall into one and lose it. Split the day into 96 small blocks
instead of 24 large ones and time stops being a vague blur: it
becomes something you can feel moving. It's the logic behind
15-minute time-blocking, a technique a lot of people use to fight
distraction and time-blindness, and one many with ADHD lean on -
smaller units are harder to ignore and easier to start a task
inside of.
Underneath, at normal speed:
- ISO week of the year, shown as week / total (e.g. 26/53)
- The real 24-hour time, for when you actually need it
- The date in clean ISO 8601 format (YYYY-MM-DD)
Black on white, no clutter, updates once a minute.