Are you a watch wearin' kinda' guy or not?
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Have to have my watch on, like not wearing underwear without it :P
Gramps & Pops always taught me that "A mans word is his bond, and when you are suppose to be somewhere, being on time is apart of your word
with the motto ....
"15 minutes early or more is on time
On time is Late
Late is Fired"
So its just been apart of life for me from a child to have a watch
Have always had a good Timex, one for work and another "clean" one for other then work
As far as working condition being bad for a watch, ??? I've had my hands in chemicals ranging from basic acetone, lacquer thinners, and toluol to aliphatic & polyamide epoxy reducers/thinners and everything in between, just about any construction project you can think of, (not a logger)-but wood cutting 40 cord a year for 10 years, welding, & basic mechanic work, and other then the bands (or the watch itself just waring out over time) haven't had any trouble over the years -
I'm only talking about style, nothing more. Blue collar, white collar it doesn't matter. To me watch wearing shows a since of style. Style transcends what kind of work you do. I'm a blue collar guy in a white collar job now, but I when I worked in the fire service I wore a watch everyday. Now I only wear one when I dress up.0patience:
You are aware that most a lot of blue collar men don't wear watches?blutattoo:From a sartorial standpoint it makes you look more put together in my opinion. Generally if I'm meeting important clients I may pull out my dad's Omega, but I like the thought of being a watch man more than I like the feeling of wearing one. If that makes any sense.
So are white collar more "put together", "responsible" or "grown up" than blue collar?
Fellas, I'm not trying to stir things up, but trying to give you a different perspective.
It will be rare to see a logger, heavy equipment mechanic or commercial fisherman wearing a watch.
The work would destroy them and they get accustomed to not wearing them.
To give you an example. Today I dropped $300 on work clothes. A white collar will spend that easily on a suit. The difference, when mine get oil on them, I can put them in the washer. Try that with a suit. LOL! -
A few of my watches
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I have skinny wrists (no jokes please :-) ) so bigger watches look ridiculous on me. But I do love the movado!WaltBasil:Nice Eric. You and I've got similar tastes in watches. -
0patience:
You are aware that most a lot of blue collar men don't wear watches?blutattoo:From a sartorial standpoint it makes you look more put together in my opinion. Generally if I'm meeting important clients I may pull out my dad's Omega, but I like the thought of being a watch man more than I like the feeling of wearing one. If that makes any sense.
So are white collar more "put together", "responsible" or "grown up" than blue collar?
Fellas, I'm not trying to stir things up, but trying to give you a different perspective.
It will be rare to see a logger, heavy equipment mechanic or commercial fisherman wearing a watch.
The work would destroy them and they get accustomed to not wearing them.
To give you an example. Today I dropped $300 on work clothes. A white collar will spend that easily on a suit. The difference, when mine get oil on them, I can put them in the washer. Try that with a suit. LOL!
Machinest wont wear watches either... we destroy them too.