I feel like I say it all the time around here, but one of my favorite things about working in the watch space, particularly in the micro/indie territory that we find ourselves in, is being surprised by a brand or a watch that comes at you completely unexpectedly. I had that experience recently with a new watch from Metrical, an entirely new brand that I can honestly say I had never heard of until a PR colleague dropped me an email about them. The renders in the press release had me immediately intrigued. This watch, which they call the Epiphany Origin, uses a non-traditional time telling display inspired, according to the brand, by the way humans first told the time: through changes in the sky.
The party trick of the Epiphany Origin is relatively simple. The minute hand is self explanatory and just like a traditional minute hand on any other watch you’ve worn or seen. The hours, though, are read through an aperture in the upper half of the dial, with a numerical display that spans from 6:00 to 6:00. During the daylight hours you’ll find a graphic representation of the sun in that aperture, and in the evening you’ll see the moon, trailing right behind. It’s one of those things you sometimes experience with a watch that is initially a little bewildering, but then completely intuitive. It is, after all, just a different way to clock a twelve hour timespan on a dial, and is essentially an AM/PM indicator that’s blown up to full dial size.
That “blowing up” aspect of it is what’s really rewarding about the Epiphany Origin, as there are lots of little details in the dial finishing that work together in what I found to be a charming and harmonious way. There are two distinct guilloche patterns in each interior dial section, a bolder pattern in the blue sector containing the hour ring, and a much more subtle and fine texture in the white center section where you’ll find the rotating sun and moon disc. I like the way these patterns play off one another, and I especially enjoy how one is nearly invisible in most lighting conditions. One of my favorite things a dial can do is hide a feature like this 90% of the time – it makes it that more special when you catch it in the right light.
The Epiphany Origin is also a lume machine and has one of the better lume executions I’ve seen on a dial in quite some time. The Arabic numerals and the small circular plots between them are lumed and glow a bright blue/green when fully charged and viewed in the dark. But the action is happening on the rotating sun/moon disc. Each ray emanating from the graphical representation of the sun, and the sun itself, is given a coating of lume, and when during the evening hours the moon and stars are lit up as well. No points for creativity here – it’s obviously a bit on the nose to make these dial elements glow in the dark – but the execution is really very nice. Wearing the watch, I found myself regularly charging it with a little flashlight I keep on my desk just to admire lume treatment. I think what ultimately draws me to it is that this is a very old fashioned (ancient, in fact) idea – tracking time by the sun and moon – but it’s been presented here with a contemporary twist that I find appealing. The watch doesn’t seem overly steeped in classical design elements, even though it is undeniably reaching out to the past and the earliest days of human timekeeping.





