“I’m not really a car guy: I’m a Porsche guy.” And that’s an understatement. Rod Emory lives and breathes the carmaker as one of the foremost Porsche customizers in the world. Also as an all-around “gear guy” with everything from Porsche bicycles to an impressive Porsche Hot Wheels collection, would you expect him to wear any old watch? Of course not: these days, you’ll find him wearing a Porsche Design watch created exactly to match his made-to-order car.
Porsche Design has the connection that resonates for the automaker’s fans, but the brand’s got its own identity, too. Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, designer of the famous 911 (and other cars) and grandson of the carmaker’s founder, started Porsche Design as a separate company in 1972. His inaugural product was an all-black chronograph watch, and today you can go on the company’s website and extensively customize the modern version of it — the same way you can custom-order a Porsche car.

After he’s got his hands on a car, Emory might have tweaked everything from subtle design elements to performance and its very shape. The Porsche Design online configurator (Custom-Built Timepiece Program) doesn’t quite present that level of customization, but it’s said to offer 1.5 million possible combinations. What happens when a Porsche modifier like Rod Emory digs into watch customization? He took the time to discuss his own Porsche 911 GT3 RS car, the watch he had made to match it, his fascinating career and much more.
The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Interview with Rod Emory
Q. Why do you modify Porsche cars? How did you get started?
A. I’ve been in the Porsche racing and restoration business really my entire life. This is my life’s work: I started building these cars when I was 14 years old, finished the first car when I was 16, started racing, and went on to build this amazing business around it. But the history behind what I do really goes all the way back to my grandfather, Neil Emory, who was one of the pioneers in custom car building.