The dial is cut from an actual silicon wafer, its circuit patterns visible beneath the sapphire crystal—a permanent record of the digital age rendered in analog form. Every trace and pathway on the dial once carried electrical signals; now it carries time itself.
The tungsten carbide case is nearly as hard as diamond, virtually scratchproof, and impossibly dense on the wrist. It is a material that demands attention through sheer substance—you feel its presence before you see it. A moon phase complication connects the wearer to celestial mechanics, while blued hands trace their arc across the silicon landscape.
This is a watch that bridges two worlds—the digital systems we build and the mechanical traditions that inspired them.