This is an international analog clock so you can see what time it is in other cities. With a lazy susan bearing, some magnets, and a couple of bolts this baby rotates and then locks in place, thus changing the time along with the city name on top.

If you're lucky enough to be wandering around NYC, you should check out the MoMA store which has a much higher percentage of awesomeness per square foot than most places I had the chance to see out there. MUJI fountain pens!

Inside, I saw an interesting clock by Charlotte Van Der Waals. You can see versions of it here. Basically, the clock rotates to 12 different spots, each with the names of two cities embossed into it. It's a cool trick. A 30-degree rotation moves the hour hand forward or back an hour. Clever, but almost too good to be true, right?

Yes, it is.

The first problem was the price. The range is $75 to $190 and that's too much for a clock that I could make myself. The second problem that I saw later is much worse. It doesn't work. This thing is seriously made useless by Daylight Saving Time. Tokyo doesn't observe it, the southern hemisphere countries have a reversed schedule, and the starting times vary from country to country. How does the fancy design for $190 sound now?

To solve this there need to be multiple faces that could be swapped. You could go by just a couple of faces (summer and winter) and get by or be more anal and make more. Personally, I'm just making two since it's really just the Tokyo time I care about. I could've just bought two clocks and had some tacky labels on them, but this is for my home and I don't want to feel like I live in an office.
 
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Step 1: Buy a Cheap IKEA Clock

I highly recommend the Rusch clock from IKEA. At just thee bucks it's one of the best deals in the massive warehouse store that smells of cinnamon rolls. Even cats love it!
smirnoff04 says: Jul 27, 2011. 7:36 AM
Terrific idea Fungus. :)
bsheff says: Nov 3, 2006. 12:50 PM
Nice job, I have been thinking lately about using a 24 hour movement
http://www.klockit.com/products/dept-157__sku-BBBII.html
and a dial with a world polar projection, with longitudes. but hadn't consdered that rotating the movement would change the miunte hand by 5 minutes! Thanks
fungus amungus (author) in reply to bsheffNov 3, 2006. 2:13 PM
I've been thinking about the 24-hour movements as well. Klockit is a good resource although I'd make my own dial as I'd prefer to have noon at the top and midnight on the bottom. With a 24-hour movement the minute hand would move by 2.5 minutes. Still makes it useless, I suppose. It would also make reading the time that much harder since each hour only gets half as much space and this is already pretty vague as it is.
Johenix in reply to fungus amungusJul 26, 2011. 10:10 PM
Some years back, I considered mounting a South Pole polar projection map on a 24 hour clock as a substitute for the hour hand. As the disk rotated each zone would move clockwise to the propper hour mark.
captain Jack says: Jun 29, 2010. 2:02 PM
clever.
Ruzsa says: Sep 26, 2009. 3:22 PM
Actually, Canada -- like America -- has several different time zones (act surprised), as well as one condition that America doesn't have, nor does the rest of Canada: Saskatchewan does not utilize Daylight Savings Time. Our clocks never move forward or backward an hour.
PACW in reply to RuzsaJan 15, 2010. 7:37 AM
"as well as one condition America doesn't have. . . "

Actually Arizona is one state that does not participate in the  'daylight savings' farce.  Although one of our Indian Reservations does due to an old BIA rule.  

And I believe there is a midwestern state (minnesota or indianna maybe?) that has a few counties that don't participate.  

The best analogy I've ever heard for DST is having cold toes so you cut six inches off the top of your blanket and sew it onto the bottom. 

Time is fleeting. . . .madness takes it's toll. . . .
null_x86 in reply to PACWFeb 22, 2010. 8:36 AM
Arizona and Indiana do not have DST. Canada is just like USA, in the sense that it has time zones (Pacific, Mountian, Central. Eastern, Atlantic) and it also has places that don't do DST, like Saskatchewan. 
Kryptonite says: Jan 10, 2010. 3:47 PM
That's really smart, well done on the making! 5/5!
blugyblug says: Mar 31, 2009. 1:34 AM
Half the cities on that clock are US... Some watches have a rotating rim with city names on it. You rotate it so your city is at the hour hand. Now you know the time of every time zone. (There are cities all around the rim and now that your city (Sydney) is at eg 7:00. The time zone half an hour behind you (Adelaide) is between the 6 and 7. (6:30) At the 12:00 mark there should be Alaska (some random city there).
flio191 says: Feb 25, 2009. 7:59 PM
I'd probably add dots where the names are, just because I'd like it to be a little more exact, but it's pretty cool otherwise.
teaaddict314 says: Apr 14, 2007. 2:49 AM
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bytowneboy in reply to teaaddict314Jun 9, 2008. 7:41 AM
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teaaddict314 in reply to bytowneboyJun 9, 2008. 3:29 PM
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spork969 in reply to teaaddict314Jan 19, 2009. 12:27 PM
'twas a joke, my friend.
teaaddict314 in reply to spork969Jan 19, 2009. 3:21 PM
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spork969 in reply to teaaddict314Jan 19, 2009. 4:16 PM
First of all, THAT'S ignorant. Not all Americans are ignorant, nor are all ignorant people American. Secondly, s(he) said, "*is canadian*" which on the internet symbolizes an action. The action being performed is "being Canadian." Therefore, the person who you are incorrectly assuming to be an ignorant American is neither American nor ignorant, but rather a Canadian jokester.
flio191 in reply to spork969Feb 25, 2009. 7:58 PM
weirdo you're a weirdo. therefore all canadians are weirdos. :D
bytowneboy in reply to spork969Jan 19, 2009. 5:11 PM
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B_Ko in reply to bytowneboyMay 6, 2009. 8:54 AM
Well, this got out of hand.
nachobobs in reply to teaaddict314Dec 15, 2007. 5:53 AM
In Canadia, all time stopps once a day for the feast of dumplings. Therefore, a clock for Canadia would be impossible
Warlrosity in reply to nachobobsFeb 28, 2009. 11:42 PM
COOL!
IW5 Industries in reply to nachobobsJan 19, 2009. 4:46 PM
canadia? i thought it was canada.
reidzuk in reply to IW5 IndustriesMar 15, 2009. 11:33 AM
ITS CANADA, that guy is probably just an ignorant American
Kryptonite in reply to reidzukJan 10, 2010. 3:44 PM
He wasn't talking about Canada, he was talking about Canadia! :P

Silly jokes, that's all it is.
rattyrain in reply to reidzukApr 17, 2009. 4:15 PM
The word "Canadia" is a joke. Don't be so critical.
IW5 Industries in reply to reidzukMar 23, 2009. 4:12 PM
hey im american!
nachobobs in reply to IW5 IndustriesMar 24, 2009. 1:19 AM
I am actually from the Xuan Province of Outer Mongolia, three doors down from the Fish and Chip shop on Russel Street
bytowneboy in reply to IW5 IndustriesJan 19, 2009. 5:20 PM
Probably anachronistic British spelling. The Dominion of Canadia... sounds about right.
SG Merc says: Sep 22, 2008. 6:11 AM
This is very cool and ingenious.

You've done a great job of taking something traditionally digital, and making it analog. I've been building custom clocks for 10 years, and love analog pieces. So I just think yours is quite classy.

My latest photo clocks are on www.clockity.com, if you wanted to take a look at the style I go for.
mrmath says: Oct 30, 2006. 11:07 AM
Are you not using the minute hand because some timezones are half hour off?
fungus amungus (author) in reply to mrmathOct 30, 2006. 11:10 AM
Rotating the hour hand 30-degrees changes the time a whole hour. Doing the same to the minute hand changes it 5 minutes as well, giving the wrong time. The second hand is just as inaccurate, but it helps to show that the clock's battery is still working.
jahsavi in reply to fungus amungusDec 9, 2006. 10:03 AM
No what you need to do is cut off the long parts of the second hand. Then glue a little globe image to rotate on the second hand :)
n3ldan says: Nov 2, 2006. 7:16 PM
That's _so_ cool. I saw a 12-sided clock like that, it was tiny though. And I'm pretty sure it was like $300 too...
padfoot447 says: Oct 31, 2006. 7:35 AM
Very cool. Is it possible to have the turntable connected to only the hour hand, so when you turn the lazy susan the minutes and seconds stay the same? I guess it really depends on what clock you use.
fungus amungus (author) in reply to padfoot447Oct 31, 2006. 10:38 AM
That's a little tough. The whole clock is rotating here. The solution would be to be able to fix the minute hand in place only during a rotation in the current setup. A different build could just move the hour hand when an outside ring was rotated. The clock movement here has the hour hand on the bottom of the three hands so that wasn't possible. It would be easier to have a touchscreen display at that point.
zachninme says: Oct 30, 2006. 1:25 PM
So, you basically just rotate the clock so the city faces upward? Very smart!
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