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Analog style watch. The rings that radiate from the middle of the display are for the hours. These change from the background to foreground color as the hours increase. As the hours light up, they include smaller rings positioned appropriately as per an analog display (this creates the Phi-like spiral). These are filled to show the 5-minute positions and these continue beyond the hour rings if the 5-minutes exceed the hours. The 5-minutes are displayed in the inverse colour to that of the hour rings. Single minutes are show by four smaller rings that appear in the twelve o'clock position, again with inverse fill as the minutes increase. There is a choice of foreground color on the configuration page. Screenshots show: 9:31, 12:59, 7:45, 8:04 This design was created by Peter Fletcher and originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. it is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2013/06/27/phi-ocular-could-be-watching-you/

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Peter Fletcher. The time is told by four round displays each showing a digit wrapped around the center of the display. The right-hand side of the digit at the top, slightly left of center and the left-hand side at the other end of the ring slightly right of center. This is similar to the numbers displayed in “Digital Warp”, but separated out. The top two displays are the hours and the bottom two the minutes. The four screenshots are examples and show: (1) 09:24 (2) 23:08 (3) 19:44 (4) 17:56 This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/07/01/quad-warp-a-twisted-digital-watch/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Peter Fletcher. The time is told on four circular dials, cut into segments - the number of segments in the circle equals the number. Empty circle with no segments = 0, a dot in the middle creates one segment = 1, a line dissecting the circle in two = 2 and so on. The two top dials are for hours and the bottom two for minutes. The three screenshots are examples and show: (1) 23:59 (2) 07:38 (3) 16:24 This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2012/05/25/division-lcd-watch-tells-time-in-segments/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

The time is told in an analogue style on a 3D effect disc, a bit like a ventilated brake disc. The blocks inside the diagonal slots turn off incrementally to display the current time. The hours are on the inner ring of slots (red) and the 5-minutes on the outer ring (cyan). The inner slots that display the hours are in the traditional analogue position. Following the line of the slots outward gives the 5-minute for that position. A little bit tricky, but you soon get used to it. The additional 4 single minutes are in the screw-like holes top, bottom, left and right, starting at the top. 2 final points to note: - At midday (12:00) all blocks are on - At midnight (00:00) all 5-minute blocks on, all hour blocks off Screenshots: (1) 6:13 (2) 8:44 (3) 12:00 (4) 00:00 (5) 3:34 (with Quick View) Design from Peter Fletcher, from the UK. The watchface has been co-developed with the designer and is published with the designer's permission.

The time is told by four concentric digits which wrap around the center of the display. The right-hand side of the digit is at the top, slightly left of center, and the left-hand side at the other end of the ring, slightly right of center. The digits are read from outside in - the outer two digits are the hours and the inner two are the minutes. The digits are hidden in plain view and look cryptic to those unfamiliar with it, but will be clear as day to the initiated. Time displayed in 12 or 24 hour mode, depending on watch settings. Version 2 supports color and round Pebbles. It requires firmware version 3.8+. Configuration options allow choice of number colors and white or black backgrounds. Screenshots show: 02:58, 09:36, 14:45 Design created by Peter Fletcher, from UK, and originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2013/01/03/digital-warp-lcd-watch-replicates-a-black-hole-on-your-wrist/

The time is told by the asymmetric array of shapes. The hours are displayed as digits. The minutes in 5-minute shapes in the analogue positions along with four single minutes in a vertical column just inside these on the left hand side. If the hour has "lit up" where the 5-minute shape needs to appear, the "light" is switched off. The PM indicator appears in the triangle on the right side. Configurable options: - Midnight hour can be set to 0 or 12. - Color of the shapes The three screenshots show: (1) 15:15 (2) 10:45 (3) 20:21 Design created by Peter Fletcher originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. It is published with the designer's permission and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/06/13/asymmetric-led-watch-is-a-cryptic-fusion-of-analogue-digital/

Analog style watch displayed on two faces of a cube with battery level and bluetooth connectivity shown on the third (left hand) face. Hours and 5-minutes appear as blank cells arranged around the top and right faces of the cube, respectively, in analog fashion starting with 0 in the highest cell. 4 additional minutes are shown with the cells in the middle of the right face disappearing. The middle large cell on the top face is the PM indicator (not present in the morning). The battery level decreases every 10% drop. 3 screenshots: (1) 8:10PM, battery 100%, bluetooth connected (2) 3:46PM, battery 10%, bluetooth connected (3) 11:34AM, battery 70%, no bluetooth The last two images are not screenshots, but show how to read the time. Design created by Peter Fletcher and orinigally appeared onthe Tokyoflash Design Studio. It is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2013/03/13/anacube-a-geometric-analogue-style-lcd-watch/

The outer twelve segments indicate the hours, the five large inner segments show 10 minute groups and the nine smaller segments are the single minutes. All colors are configurable. Screenshots show: (1) 12:59 (2) 08:23 (3) 05:37 (4) 07:54 (with Quick View) This design was created by László Scheffer and originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. It is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2013/04/25/1259-block-design-update/

Numbers are drawn across the middle of the screen and the gaps are filled in. The simple numbers interlock and form unique shapes. The color of the foreground shapes for the time can be configured and the background shapes can also be set to the same color. Screenshots show: (1) 17:40 (2) 12:08 (3) 21:53 (4) 10:46 (5) 09:00 (with Quick View) Design created by Justin Schofield from UK originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. It is published with the designer's permission and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/02/19/circuit-e-paper-watch-design-makes-creative-use-of-negative-space/

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by László Scheffer. The time is built from blocks that together give a tunnel appearance. Four individual minutes are the small blocks in the middle. 5-minute blocks are on the left, starting from the middle. Hours the larger blocks to the right, starting next to the single minutes. The three screenshots show: (1) 12:59 (2) 11:41 (3) 05:20 This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/01/06/tunnel-lcd-watch-creates-subway-effect-with-time/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Peter Fletcher. The display presents a faceted geometric cube shape. The facets are blocks on the display. The time telling method is a simple analogue format. The hours are told by the inner ring of facets in traditional positions, with the relevant facet changing to an outlined shape. 5-minutes facets are in the outer ring, again in traditional positions. 4 additional single minutes are on the sides of the inner cube. The PM indicator changes the top of the inner cube to an outlined shape. The three screenshots show: (1) 17:28 (2) 11:34 (3) 00:20 This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2013/01/17/hypercube-lcd-version/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

A design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Peter Fletcher that combines both the original and the digital versions. You switch between them using a sharp shake of the wrist. The first screenshot shown here is a stylised shot showing half of each face - to show that this is a 2-in-1 watchface. For both, one line of the “X” shape displays the hours. The other line, divided into two by the hours, displays 5 x 10 minutes (bottom left) and 9 single minutes (top right). The two individual faces displayed are shown on the second and third screenshots. The three screenshots show: (1) 21:09 - stylised image - half digital/half original (2) 11:23 (original) (3) 23:58 (digital) This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. Pete's original design for both versions (digital was in one of Peter's comments) can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/05/28/type-x-watch-makes-its-mark-on-your-wrist/ If you don't want both watchfaces, go for one of the single face versions - click on "More from this Developer", where you can also find other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces.

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Sam Jerichow and Peter Fletcher. The display is a set of rectangular "rings", that, together, represent a fingerprint. The gaps create four numbers - hours at the top and minutes at the bottom. It’s completely cryptic for the untrained eye, so some practice is needed. The three screenshots show: (1) 17:46 (2) 08:22 (3) 23:59 This watchface is published with the designers' permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/06/09/fingerprint-e-paper-watch-exposes-digital-time/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

Design from the Tokyoflash Design Studio, created by Peter Fletcher. The hour is the dark section in the saucer found in the traditional analog watch positions. The 10-minutes are the digital number on the left nacell (bottom left) and the additional minutes on the right nacell (bottom right). PM is indicated with a block on the fuselage (bottom middle). The three screenshots show: (1) 10:29 (2) 17:48 (displayed as 5:48 PM) (3) 06:13 This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/05/23/wrist-wear-to-boldly-go/ To see other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

Time shown as large stars appearing on a star field. Hours (blue/white) and 5-minutes (orange) appear in roughly the same positions as on an analog watch. The additional 4 single minutes (orange), for accuracy, appear in the middle. Configuration options to display a large comet in foreground and to vibrate if bluetooth connection lost. Requires Pebble firmware 3.10 or later. Screenshots show: (1) 10:19 (2) 04:52 (3) 09:46 (4) 05:29 (5) 09:53 (no bluetooth) This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/06/25/stars-watch-galactic-view-tells-the-time/

Digital version of Type-X. One line of the “X” shape displays the hours in blue. The other line, divided into two by the hours, displays 5 x 10 minutes (bottom left) and 9 single minutes (top right) in red. Displays in 12 or 24-hours, depending on watch setting. Screenshots show: (1) 23:46 (24-hour) (2) 07:39 (3) 09:16 (4) 16:22 (24-hour) (5) 04:23 This design was created by Peter Fletcher and originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. This watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The digital version of Type-X was in one of Peter's comments against the original design found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/05/28/type-x-watch-makes-its-mark-on-your-wrist/ For the original Type-X, and other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, click on "More from this Developer".

Time shown on the face of the "X". One line of the “X” shape displays the hours (blue). The other line, divided into two by the hours, displays 5 x 10 minute groups and 9 single minutes (red). Screenshots show: (1) 07:47 (2) 09:35 (3) 06:41 The design was created by Peter Fletcher and originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. The watchface is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design, with more example times, can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/05/28/type-x-watch-makes-its-mark-on-your-wrist/ For other sanctioned Tokyoflash watchfaces, including the digital version of Type-X, click on "More from this Developer".

A cryptic analog based watchface. The outer blocks are the hour (fatter) and 5-minutes (thinner) in traditional positions. The additional 4 minutes, for accuracy, are in the middle. Both colors are configurable. Screenshots: 6:26, 6:32, 2:06, 4:24, 11:22 This design, created by Justin Schofield, originally appeared on the Tokyoflash Design Studio. It is published with the designer's permission, and sanctioned by Tokyoflash. The original design, with example times, can be found here: http://blog.tokyoflash.com/2014/05/06/squared²-e-paper-watch-black-white-pixel-art/ Note that the hour is now the fatter block and the 5-minute the thinner one - we thought that would be more intuitive.