Many names, one year. A diagram of The Present - Year surrounded by the word Year in 27 different languages.
Simple diagram of The Present - Year illustrating how each color corresponds to the changing seasons.
Many names, one year. A diagram of The Present - Year surrounded by the word Year in 27 different languages.
Simple diagram of The Present - Year illustrating how each color corresponds to the changing seasons.

The Present - (Matte)

An annual wall "clock" made in Vermont by Scott Thrift.

One continuous 365.24-day revolution.

I would be lost without The Present as a constant in my life.Owner for 12 years

$ 360.00 USD
365.24-day annual revolution
Engineered to run for one century, really.
Made-to-order in Vermont (ships in a week)
Limited Lifetime Warranty
Made to order. Ships in a week.
Installation hardware included

Because it actually is.

The Present is built around a movement that was designed from the ground up to last as long as possible on a single set of batteries.

There’s nothing off-the-shelf about it. No extras. No bloat. Just a handful of parts doing exactly what they need to do, and nothing more.

The heart of it is a custom circuit and code created by Josh Levine (Josh.com) – one of those rare engineers who can think in decades, not product cycles.

Inside the clock:

  • The electronics sip about 1 microamp continuously.
  • The hand only moves once every 2 hours 26 minutes.
  • Each step is 1⁄3600 of a full circle.

That’s it.

Wake up, move a tiny bit, go back to sleep.

On purpose, the movement draws so little power that the limiting factor isn’t “running out of battery,” it’s time itself – the slow aging of materials, seals, and chemistry.

The math (why a century is conservative)

The Present movement uses less than 9 milliamp-hours of energy per year.

Even if we’re conservative and say each lithium AA pack starts at 2600 mAh (instead of the 3000 mAh they’re typically rated for), the numbers look like this:

  • Clock draw: ~8.94 mAh per year
  • Battery capacity (conservative): 2600 mAh
  • 2600 ÷ 8.94 ≈ 291 years

If you use the more realistic 3000 mAh figure, you get:

  • 3000 ÷ 8.94 ≈ 335 years

So in pure energy terms, if nothing ever leaks, corrodes, or jams, the stored power is enough to keep the hand tracing the year for roughly three centuries.

That’s why we say it is “engineered to run for one century” – because one century is actually the cautious version of what the engineering supports.

Why lithium, and why it matters

We ship The Present with lithium AA cells, hot-glued into place, not alkaline.

That matters for two reasons:

  1. Leakage:

    Alkaline cells are notorious for leaking over time. Lithium cells have an extremely low leakage rate – orders of magnitude lower – which is why they were originally marketed as “never leak.” Under extreme heat or humidity anything can fail, but lithium is by far the most stable choice.
  2. Self-discharge:

    Lithium cells lose their charge very slowly over decades. Your Year clock uses roughly 0.34% of the pack per year. Over long spans, the batteries will lose as much or more energy simply existing as they do actually running the clock.

In other words: the movement is so efficient that, over time, the batteries themselves are the “noisy” part of the system.

Built like a long-term instrument, not a gadget

The movement sits on a custom PCB with a thin layer of gold on the traces for longevity.

The gear shafts are modified and fused to reduce the number of ticks by a factor of 60 compared to a normal clock, and the motor is driven in a way that pulls from one battery on one step and the other on the next.

Torque is sufficient, parts are few, and there’s very little to wear out.

This isn’t a mass-market clock mechanism slapped into a pretty shell.

It’s an intentionally over-engineered, ultra-low-power time instrument.

So when we say:

“Designed, engineered to run for one century, really.”

we mean:

  • The math points to ~291–335 years of available energy.
  • We deliberately under-promise at one century.
  • And we fully expect some of these timepieces to still be sweeping the year well into the next century – and quite possibly the one after that – on the batteries they shipped with.

Limited Lifetime Warranty

We stand behind our work.

Every single component of this timepiece is original and has been over-engineered for longevity.

Limited Lifetime Warranty means:

  • If The Present ever stops working during normal use, at any point in your lifetime, we will repair or replace it for free.
  • You cover shipping to and from Burlington, Vermont.
  • We cover the work and the parts.

No fine-print trap. If something inside fails under normal conditions, we fix it.

What’s not covered

The warranty does not cover damage caused by:

  • Drops or falls (off a nail, off the wall, off a shelf)
  • Submersion in water (bathtubs, pools, lakes, sinks, storms, water parks, typhoons)
  • Fire, extreme heat, or intentional abuse
  • Heavy dust / debris environments (e.g., active wood shops, metal grinding, etc.)

Examples:

  • If it falls and the print cracks:

    The movement will likely still be fine. We can refurbish or rebuild it at cost, but that’s outside the free warranty.
  • If you drop it in water:
    It will not work. Warranty is void.
  • If you throw it in a fire:
    It will probably melt. Warranty is void.
  • If you use it as a dinner plate for lasagna night: It might still run, but… warranty is void (and also, gross!).
  • If you put it in the microwave for 10 minutes: It will almost certainly explode. Warranty very, very void.

You get the idea: normal life, yes. Abuse, no.

About the batteries

We ship The Present with lithium L91 AA batteries, chosen specifically because:

  • Their leakage rate is effectively near zero (on the order of under 0.01%)
  • They’re far more stable than standard alkaline batteries
  • Their self-discharge is extremely low over decades

Realistically, the two most likely long-term risks are:

  1. A fall
  2. Battery leakage after many decades in extreme conditions

If the batteries leak and damage the movement, that’s considered environmental/chemical damage, not a defect.

In that case, we can refurbish or replace the movement at cost.

How long is it really designed to last?

Electrically, this originally engineered marvel of technology is so efficient that, on the original lithium batteries, it has enough stored energy to run for roughly 291–335 years if nothing ever leaks, jams, or corrodes.

We therefore say, conservatively:

This timepiece is engineered to run for at least a century on the batteries it ships with.

If it doesn’t, and you haven’t submerged it, burned it, or smashed it —

we’ll make it right.

  • Original movement engineered to last between 100-300 years on the the included batteries.
  • 11" in Diameter (27.94 cm)
  • 2" from wall (6.35 cm)
  • 2.2 lbs (1 kg)
  • Airbrushed Resin/Fiberglass Hand
  • Stunning UV Cured Print engineered to resist color drain even in direct sunlight
  • Custom cork body from Portugal
  • L91 Lithium Batteries Already Installed
  • Anodized Backplate
  • Installation hardware to ensures flush mount
  • It's Amazing

Wrapped neatly in a modest box you will find an original, exquisitely made work of art engineered to operate at 365.24 days a year and last for a century.

(1) The Present - (Matte)
(1) Installation Hardware

Each timepiece is made to order by the founder, Scott Thrift.

Your order will ship within one week from purchase date.

No.

In fact, hours are irrelevant at the scale of the entire year.

After it is assembled by the founder, Scott Thrift, he will set it to The Present moment in the studio.

It will arrive to you, already on and in time.

If there is ever an issue, you can alter the hand by way of the small blue dial behind the backplate.

There is also a live reading of where we are in the year on our homepage at all times.

Yes.

The single hand of The Present - Year spans 365.24 days within a 360 degree revolution; meaning the hand moves slightly more than one degree per day.

The single hand lines up vertically at the solstices and horizontally at the equinoxes.

The top is December 21st, not New Year's Eve.

11" diameter (27.94 cm) and it weighs 2.2 lbs. (1 kg)

For drywall, there is a hand-picked anchor and screw complete with an instruction card on how to use both.

The screw has a hand-painted yellow neck indicating the point to which you fasten the screw into the anchor for a perfect fit.

If you are installing on wood, using a sturdy screw or nail.

If you are installing on something else, you probably know what you're doing.

If you don't please let me know.

Do not use picture hangers or contact strips; I guarantee you it will fall, in time.

To change the way you see your time.

To make the present last longer.

To inspire conversations.

To give life more time.

To shift perspective.

To open your mind.

The Revolution

A Singular Revolution

The single hand of The Present accurately traces Earth’s journey around our Sun, spanning one continuous revolution every 365.24-days.

Due North = December 21st - Winter Solstice

Due South = June 21st - Summer Solstice

Due West = September 22 - Autumn Equinox

Due East = March 21 - Spring Equinox

Experience being present beyond seconds, minutes, and hours.

Featured

The Problem

It's About Time

Gain instant access to a wider, more abundant experience of time.

Enrich your present-moment awareness by seeing and knowing "now" in the context of nature.

Rediscover the beauty and wisdom of change as it plays out across the year.

Bring a thought-provoking work of original, functional art into your space to inspire dynamic conversations about the value of time and the meaning of life.

Balance in Time

The Present

Cyclical

Abundance

Spectral

Color

Forgiving

Biological

Stillness

Grounding

Holistic

Industrial Time

Linear

Scarcity

Binary

Black & White

Exacting

Mechanical

Seconds

Anxiety

Fragmented