Wood & Craft·Paulo Ricardo Goncalves
Wood and Epoxy Clock
A Clock That Stops Time (And Then Tells It) I make these wall clocks by hand, combining wood with deep epoxy pours, and honestly, each one turns out completely different from the last — which is exactly the point. This one sits at 450mm across, big enough to be a proper statement piece without overwhelming a room. The wood grain shows through the epoxy in ways I can never quite predict; sometimes the resin catches the light and seems to glow from inside, other times it sits deep and moody. It keeps perfect time, of course, but it's really about having something on your wall that has actual character — the kind of thing that makes people stop and ask where you found it. What I love about making these is that they work everywhere. I've seen them in minimalist apartments where they're the only decoration, and I've seen them in grand homes where they hold their own against everything else. The wood species, the colors, the size — I can adjust any of it. If you want it smaller for an entryway, larger for a living room feature wall, or in a specific wood that matches your space, I can do that. The epoxy stays food-safe and the mechanism is reliable; this isn't precious art that you're afraid to use. These are for people who actually want to live with something meaningful rather than just own it. Someone who walks past their wall every day and notices the details, who appreciates that it was made by a real person in a workshop, not stamped out in a factory somewhere.