There are watches and there are “themed” watches. The latter, gimmick brands that spring up on Kickstarter, have generally not gone over well with watch enthusiasts, in part because they’re a dime a dozen, but also because they’ve created a large community of burned micro-investors. Only a tiny sliver of these brands succeeds.

So one might be initially skeptical of William Wood watches, which feature crowns made from melted 100-year-old British brass firefighter helmets and straps of upcycled firefighting hose. And yet, these ebullient, eye-catching watches — a love letter from founder Jonny Garrett to his grandfather, a veteran of the British Firefighting Services — have been embraced by watch lovers.
The enthusiastic response to the seven-year-old brand has freed Garrett from the Kickstarter platform and launched him into the conversation of great British indie watchmakers like Paul Sweetenham of Farer, Lewis Heath of AnOrdain and Mike France of Christopher Ward.
William Wood watches are a study in texture and color. Their domed crystals, big colors (majestic purple, for the Queen’s Jubilee) and checkerboard chapter rings are all flash and glam. Their cases are chunky and classical.
Then there are the straps, hand-stitched out of used firehose. The stuff just happens to make for a great silicone-esque material, with the scratches, marks and patina watch nerds love.