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Analog/digital watchface with date and battery meter.

Inspired by a cool analog-style VFD (vacuum fluorescent display) clock. Unlike the real thing, number labels change from relatively dim minutes to brightly glowing hours (or as close an approximation as one can get on the Pebble display). Battery meter at bottom.

When I was a kid I kept myself busy for hours by hand-animating a Lite-Brite (though without taking pictures of each frame). We have much better toys now! Combination analog/digital watchface, with battery meter.

A simple watchface where the text is made from dark monochrome noise, and the background is made from bright colorful noise. Battery bar graph in lower left.

A watchface that smashes two fonts together, scales them to fit, and adds a little glitchy secret sauce.

Digital watchface at a 45 degree angle. Hours are blue, minutes orange. The background "X" is a battery meter.

A "camo" watch face with a bit of safety orange.

Named after the Norse creation myth where ice from Niflheim (the hour digits) met fire from Muspelheim (minutes digits). The time in the screenshot is 4:53 (not 5:34).

Garnet from "Steven Universe" shows you the future time with Future Vision! That's right, this watchface will show you what time it will be one hour from now... and one time zone to the west. Which just happens to be the current time. The position of the "sparkle" on the top of her shades is a battery meter (all the way right = 100%, left = 0%).

An otherwise simple digital watchface, where color combinations and glitch/streak angles are randomized every minute (while maintaining readable contrast).

A slightly unusual watchface. The number of horizontal pink lines represent hours; vertical green lines in the top half are tens of minutes, and in the bottom half are single minutes. Lines are clustered/spaced to make them easy to recognize at a glance instead of tediously counting them. The example given is 5:51.

Analog style watchface on a pixelated background. The blue reticle points to the hours, the red to minutes -- it's 5:47 in this example. Date and battery status are intentionally obscure but readable in the corners.

Digital watchface with overlapping numbers, partially created as a design experiment, and partially inspired by a certain someone in the TV show Steven Universe. Battery meter across the top.

"...but we're thinking of changing the name." -- Trent Lane Surprisingly easy to read analog watchface. The inner end of the spiral is the hour, the outer end is the minute. It's 5:32 in the screenshot below.

Time and date wrapped around a circular battery meter, then colorfully glitched out.

Analog+digital watchface in the style of a hit 1981 video game. The position of the player's ship indicates the hour. The enemy's position indicates 5 minute intervals, and the length of the spike indicates the remainder of the minutes. The score (top left) is the time, and the high score is the battery charge (80% in the screenshot) and current date (Tuesday the 18th).

A version of the Polybius analog watchface, with digital display added for convience.

A big digital watchface where each digit is constructed from a 3x3 block grid. Most numbers are immediately easy to read and the rest are easy to decipher -- in this screenshot the time is 08:35 on Saturday the 15th.

An analog watchface hidden in plain sight. The three vertices of the black triangle are the center of the watch, the hour hand, and minute hand -- in the first screenshot the time is 8:27. Even when the hour and minute hand align, the other triangles point to them to reveal the time -- the second screenshot is 9:15 and the third is 6:30.

A hybrid analog/digital watchface with battery meter and date.