I like making experimental watch faces.
Traditional clocks and watches, limited by their physical factor, have to tell the time in a regular, generic, informative design. Such limitation, however, is no longer true in the smartwatch age, why don't we explore more irregular designs just for fun?
Sometimes we don't need that much accuracy, like no one needs a nanosecond-hand, maybe we don't need to know the exact minute on a holiday? Time sometimes goes faster, sometimes slower, then why must our clocks be linear? What if a day has 28 hours?
Click on the above watch faces to explore my stupid designs. They are not very practical, but I find some of them good enough for my daily usage. Most of them are only available for Pebble, as it's not technically possible on Apple Watch. Maybe it's now a good time to get a Pebble again?
Making these impractical watch faces makes me happy, it's just recreactional. As a professional programmer, work can be pretty boring. These nonsense watch faces though, was very refreshing. The limitation on Pebble's platform means there's just no space left for bloated code, and a watch face is a scope small enough, that a single C file with raw pointers are still easily manageable for me.
These watch faces are all open-sourced.