Wristwatches are sentimental items, popular as gifts and natural candidates for personalization of all kinds. Beyond the engraving of initials or messages on a case back, however, more extensive customization has often meant a consultation between a watchmaker and a client who can afford such a special service. The internet and globalized production, however, have begun to offer more options to more people.
Depending on the type of features and level of customization, watches can entail a lot more complexity than, say, printing your selfie on a t-shirt or coffee mug — though there are indeed services offering to put your own picture on a watch’s case back or even dial (not that we recommend it). Somewhere between engraving your initials and commissioning a bespoke one-off piece by a high-end independent watchmaker are online configurators that allow users to mix and match existing components and colors.
Just like many websites allow customers to see a watch with different strap combinations, some also apply the same concept to other components. However, watch parts are usually a lot more complicated to swap than straps, often requiring special training and skills. Making these watches to order also means that they might not ship right away and can take longer to make it to your wrist. But the prospect of having a watch that’s unlike any other and made special by your own touches and taste is an attractive proposition.
To be clear, we’re speaking here specifically about websites that make their models to order (certain websites such as Rolex and Oris offer a “configure your watch” button or something similar, but this is really more of a way to search through existing models based on their features). Below are examples of companies offering online configurators, and we recommend trying them out for yourself.
Timex

Timex offers the nominal customization experience of choosing the case you prefer, matching one of various dials to it and then choosing a strap. The dials come pre-designed without the option of changing specific elements. Like every other configuring program, you start by choosing the base model. Timex offers eight existing models to customize, and we messed around with the Scout 40 with a “silver-tone” case and matched it to a blue dial from among seven options. Pairing it to a gray strap, the result would cost the same as one of the pre-fab Scout 40 models at $75.