I don’t remember when or where I first came across the CW&T Solid State Watch, but the paired-down, transparent digital timepiece stuck in my brain for a long time before I bought it. I was hung up.
While the unique look caught my attention, the watch’s functionality — or lack thereof — truly captured my imagination. The time can’t be adjusted. The battery will run out and die in ten years.
The retro feel I was initially drawn to undoubtedly comes from the Casio F-91W movement. The little digital display — a classic — was first released in 1989 and is still available in plenty of Casio watches. But seeing it bare, encased in solid resin set in a clear 32mm 3D-printed case, makes it feel fresh and familiar at the same time. While the watch itself is the main draw, the addition of the Nick Mankey Designs lunar grey elastic watch strap printed with a unique numeric code and color label (a signature of CW&T projects) add a pseudo-seriousness reminiscent of Tom Sach’s Space Program: Mars.

CW&T Solid State Watch
While it’s true that the watch’s retrofuture space-age qualities earn it compliments when I wear it out, I remain enamored with it for its sheer uselessness.
Because the makers of this watch set the Casio movement in resin, wearers can’t use any buttons to adjust the time. Not for daylight saving time, not for trips to different time zones, and not to correct for the slow and inevitable adding or subtracting seconds most watches do (it can be up to a second a day). Even the alarm and light functions of the watch are unusable. As a result, it’s never a given that the Solid State Watch is on time. When I wear it, I can’t be sure if I need to add or subtract hours to know what time it is. CW&T knowinglyadded a bright orange dot to cover the almost-certainly-incorrect date (the date can’t be adjusted after leap years).