I expected to see mention of the volvelle - a medieval device made of paper that could approximate the phase of the moon by moving a circular hole around a carefully designed track. There’s a long explanation of it at https://astrolabeproject.com/downloads/volvelle/deconstructi...
> Geneva Moon seeks to provide a highly accurate, visually pleasing indication of what the moon looks like right now, right where you are. My goal was to make it so that if you look down at your wrist and then up into the sky the images you see should match.
Does the "double bosom" occlusion mechanism have a proper name? I always thought it was a bit daft — excusable on watches perhaps — but on larger clocks where there's plenty of space why not just have a half black sphere that rotates once per lunar month? (Even better would be a small model of the moon with a half black shade rotating around it).
Anyway: I made a (web) clock with that shows the moon position and phase: https://sunclock.net
It takes a special kind of mind to tackle an idea so entrenched, rethink the design from first principles, do it well, and come up with something so different from what was there before.
Ages ago, a "Moonphase" font which I did was used in the typesetting of _Calendrical Tabulations_, so this sort of thing has always been near to my heart (I also used to use a "Phases of the Moon" application as a desktop background).
I expected to see mention of the volvelle - a medieval device made of paper that could approximate the phase of the moon by moving a circular hole around a carefully designed track. There’s a long explanation of it at https://astrolabeproject.com/downloads/volvelle/deconstructi...
while we’re all promoting our moon phase apps, I made one for Apple Watch: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moon-sign-simplicity-for-watch...
Is this innovative for watch complications? It feels like it. It might be the first innovation for a while.
Consumes a lot of space under the dial, so occludes other complications..
(not a horologist or luxury watch collector)
Mechanical watch:
https://monochrome-watches.com/the-elegant-mixture-of-time-a...
Prague’s astronomical clock does that too:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prague_astronomical_clock#Moon
More about spherical moonphases:
https://www.the1916company.com/blog/variations-on-the-moonph...
A smartwatch complication:
https://www.david-smith.org/blog/2019/09/26/moon-plus-plus/
> Geneva Moon seeks to provide a highly accurate, visually pleasing indication of what the moon looks like right now, right where you are. My goal was to make it so that if you look down at your wrist and then up into the sky the images you see should match.
Does the "double bosom" occlusion mechanism have a proper name? I always thought it was a bit daft — excusable on watches perhaps — but on larger clocks where there's plenty of space why not just have a half black sphere that rotates once per lunar month? (Even better would be a small model of the moon with a half black shade rotating around it).
Anyway: I made a (web) clock with that shows the moon position and phase: https://sunclock.net
Great work on that web clock, that's a fantastic UI.
btw here's a simple SVG animation I made while working out the code: http://virtualgeoff/demos/moonphases/
It takes a special kind of mind to tackle an idea so entrenched, rethink the design from first principles, do it well, and come up with something so different from what was there before.
Bravo.
Nice!
Ages ago, a "Moonphase" font which I did was used in the typesetting of _Calendrical Tabulations_, so this sort of thing has always been near to my heart (I also used to use a "Phases of the Moon" application as a desktop background).
Just use a digital screen for that part
Just buy a smartwatch, duh.