A partial six numeral with a sub-seconds was so common at one point in pocket watches, they were called "6 eaters". But, How do YOU feel about them? Do you prefer a dot? Nothing at all? What is best for a sub-seconds? Let me know your preference, please. ...
Not optimal, but better than leaving what looks like a zero in that space. I might personalize the 6 to make it stand out, like Bedat does with their number 8. Kurt
I am less concerned with Tudor and more looking at, say, the globemaster, which I think doesn't quite reach the heights of the earlier Omega watches it tries to be inspired by.
On many watches there is no 3, because of a date window. An eaten 6 is a creative way design of a dial. Yes, the pocket watch heritage of smal seconds is the reason. Should i buy a watch with an eaten 6? No, because i chose watches with a central second h...
Hereās how you determine the right course of action. First, adjust the size of the subdial. Its area should be equal to 10% of the main dial area, less if the effective area of the dial is reduced by frivolous chapter rings. Next, superimpose the 6 where ...
If the dial design is made up of Arabic hour markers, then I would prefer an eaten 6 versus a dot. It is more coherent for me. I find the dot out of place and a bit unnatural of the majority of hour markers are Arabic. An eaten 6 kinda feels as though the...
If I understand it correctly, the cut out is exactly 3 minute markers wide. So, main dial may be perfectly read as one missing minute is at the right edge of the cutout, the next is at the middle where the cutout's own marker is, and the final minute is r...
It seems to me like it is intended as a "complication", rather than an afterthought. It is more difficult, in my opinion, to place correctly the incomplete fragments so they do not look unnatural to our brain, that tends to "see" and "read" a complete num...
I think Jack Forster mentioned the "6 eater" and I figured he was a good enough source to cite. I'd love to see something more if you happen across a better source.
I like the the Scandinavian approach or this But what always bothered me was the subdial cutting in to the minute track! I sold a bunch of watches because of that... The minute markers are important to me;-))) ...
A cut of six is OK when the seconds hand is not long enough to go all the way to the lower part of the dial. That happens of course when the movement has a smaller diameter than the case. Leaving it completely open does not look too good. ...
. . . is not only original, it's . . . [watch and photo credit: mac_omega (Erich)] . . . rare. A steel ref 2097 with an early cal 30 movement, one of . . . . . . the first six hundred produced. With an artfully composed eaten 6 , to boot. Art ...
As long as it is well made and balanced. For example, the eaten 6 in your first picture looks perfect, as well as the dot in the Patek. The sub dial of the Shapiro is also good because it uses all the space, so thereās no need to use anything more. By the...