Steam Punk pocket watch I made out of spare parts hope you like it please rate if you do,its the first steam punk piece I`ve ever made thanks for viewing.I am aware that pocket watches are already steam punk but i thought this would be and interesting piece with the gears and copper exposed.
That is absolutely awesome! I bought cheap non-functioning steampunk looking stuff for Halloween and ended up being sick anyway, but I am intrigued and want to delve more into this sub-genre of SciFi. Great job!! I already sew, so I can have a fun time with costume creation, but it's the accessories I am lost on. I have already found a bunch of cool ideas on this site. I want to make a functioning pocket watch for myself. This is great :)
Steampunk is a really interesting concept. The idea is, if you have a steampunk it seems to be set in the past. they seem to use horses, and dress very mid evil. However all of their technology is very advances. they have robots and blimps and things we down have in the modern world. but even though their technology is to updated, they use a lot of bronze and over complicated systems of going around things. For example, in the modern world we can have a watch that is very small and takes up little room on your wrist, where a steampunk watch would take up half your arm and do the same amount of things. if you'd like you can google "Steampunk" and you will see what I mean. Hope you found this helpful. :)
Typename isn't far off, I'd like to help fill in the gaps.
There is some vague and unofficial agreement that Steampunk is an anachronistic line of science fiction based roughly around the Victorian Age, or otherwise earlier than the advent of the computer. It's thematic elements hinge on utilizing "ancient" technologies in very sophisticated ways, I.E. a computer using pure steam power and components. Boiler, pistons, reservoir and various governors and whatnot. Flying ships, mechanical/pneumatic/steam powered assault weaponry, non-electronic cybernetics and animal/human grafting are also popular. See Levian, a book by Scott Westerfeld.
As an art form, Steampunk generally emphasizes the functional workings of a machine as the aesthetic component, unlike today where we try to hide the working bits away under a hood or in a sleek, stylized case. It's like the battle of form vs. function, in Steampunk, the Function is the beauty, like a Skeleton pocket watch, as opposed to a LEVIS brand digital pocket watch, which devout Steampunkers would call abominable.
I hope this agrees with any Steampunkers reading this.
Steampunk is the category of fantasy/science fiction where the past basically meets the future eg. advanced technology in the Victorian age(which is the most common). A good example is the movie The Wild Wild West in which is instilled a wild west time period with lots of trains and horses and cowboys and such, but also high-tech booby traps and weapons, although it seems that most steampunk is more focused in books and art/modded objects.
Steampunk is not to be confused with diesilpunk, in which the petroleum happened in earlier in time (such as in the movie 9). This brings me to my final and concluding point, that Tim Burton is awesome.
sugestion for the cover, if you can attach a copper or brass tube slightly larger than the watch face (with cut outs for the other random pieces you have in there) i would sugest a glass magnafying lens. but that aside very nice work. simple, elegant
Very nice. I have seen any number of so called steampunk projects, here and other places that look to be something that someone just glued a couple of cogs in and call it steampunk. Your watch has an elegance to it lacking in many other creatiions. As to the crystal, perhaps a plastic watch crystal could be attatched with a few drops of rubber cement could be used. I'd get a crystal whose diameter was a little smaller than the outside diameter of the dial. That way you could glue the crystal directly to the dial. You would, of course, have to make sure the hands could still move before glueing it down.
I want one! I think it'd be really cool tho and maybe make a better steampunk peice if the...actual watch peice was more authentic. Maybe even if you just changed the color a little bit, so it didn't look so new and white it might look better. But I really do like this.
So where did you find the gears you used? And how did you get them to spin freely/what did you screw them into? Any advice on this would help -- Im working on something alot like this.
As one who's been tinkering with watches forever, I say: Very nice!!!
I like your thinking out of the box: removing a quartz watch from its (modern looking) case and using a watch box to house it. Then decorating the empty space with steampunky stuff. Niiiice!!
Does your construction have some sort of crystal/glass protecting the watch dial itself? If not, you might consider adding something. Transparent styrene from packaging material cut to shape and glued with clear E-6000 glue might do it. Otherwise, it can only be used for display.
i have been looking for something to make a cover for it but i havent found anything i like yet i want to use a piece of clear glass but havet found anything like that to cover it guess i`ll have to use plastic thanks for the comment its greatly appreciated.
The cogs do spin freely there not connected you can spin them with your finger I got the watch from a broken pocket watch I had laying around the case was busted up .
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There is some vague and unofficial agreement that Steampunk is an anachronistic line of science fiction based roughly around the Victorian Age, or otherwise earlier than the advent of the computer. It's thematic elements hinge on utilizing "ancient" technologies in very sophisticated ways, I.E. a computer using pure steam power and components. Boiler, pistons, reservoir and various governors and whatnot. Flying ships, mechanical/pneumatic/steam powered assault weaponry, non-electronic cybernetics and animal/human grafting are also popular. See Levian, a book by Scott Westerfeld.
As an art form, Steampunk generally emphasizes the functional workings of a machine as the aesthetic component, unlike today where we try to hide the working bits away under a hood or in a sleek, stylized case. It's like the battle of form vs. function, in Steampunk, the Function is the beauty, like a Skeleton pocket watch, as opposed to a LEVIS brand digital pocket watch, which devout Steampunkers would call abominable.
I hope this agrees with any Steampunkers reading this.
and Leviathan is a GREAT book
Steampunk is not to be confused with diesilpunk, in which the petroleum happened in earlier in time (such as in the movie 9). This brings me to my final and concluding point, that Tim Burton is awesome.
Did you use watch parts, or did you make it from random gears, pieces of metal, and other random stuff?
It looks really cool, btw.
i really really want one
I like your thinking out of the box: removing a quartz watch from its (modern looking) case and using a watch box to house it. Then decorating the empty space with steampunky stuff. Niiiice!!
Does your construction have some sort of crystal/glass protecting the watch dial itself? If not, you might consider adding something. Transparent styrene from packaging material cut to shape and glued with clear E-6000 glue might do it. Otherwise, it can only be used for display.
Nice job!