The Phone Timer That Pulls You Back to the Screen
You set a timer to focus, work, or steep the tea — and reaching for the phone drags you straight back into notifications. This metal hourglass keeps time the analogue way: flip it, watch the sand fall, and stay off the screen, while it sits on the shelf as a sculpture between uses.
Why It Works
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Rotating gimbal frame — the glass hangs inside a pivoting double-ring mount, so you tilt and spin it to reset the sand with a flick, turning the simple act of flipping it into part of the appeal.
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Sand-timer movement — the falling sand marks a fixed stretch of time with no battery, no beep, and no screen, so it times a focus block or a brew without pulling your attention online.
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Solid metal frame — the sturdy metal rings and weighted base give it real presence and stability, so it stands secure on a shelf and reads as a considered object, not a novelty.
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Weighted round base — the heavy disc footing anchors the pivoting frame, so it spins smoothly in place without tipping when you reset it.
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Works as standing decor — between timing sessions the gimbal-mounted glass holds the eye as a sculptural piece, so it earns its spot on a console or desk.
It suits people who want a screen-free way to time focus or tasks, anyone styling a study, console, or living-room shelf with a classic-modern accent, and gift-buyers after something that's decorative and quietly useful.
Is It a Real Timer or Just Decoration?
Both — the sand runs a genuine fixed interval, so it works as a true analogue timer for focus blocks, tea, or short tasks, while the rotating frame makes it a standing sculpture the rest of the time. Set it on a level surface, flip the glass in its gimbal to start, and let the sand fall. Dust the frame with a dry cloth to keep the metal bright.
Set it on the desk once and timing something stops meaning picking up the phone — you flip the glass and stay where you are.