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Why do all watches displayed for sale show 10:10?
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talk about weird!. Just googled.. Lincoln died at 10.10. pentagon got hit at 10.10. United 93 hijacked at 10.10.. . Don't know real reason though!
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I've never actually seen that.
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research shows that it gives the watch/clock symmetry and makes it pleasing to the eye.
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Maybe it's 10:10 when you looked at them. They are usually set for the correct time unless they are not running and have that little plastic thingy holding the stem out in my experience.
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Aesthetics. I personally think that the 10:10 position (sometimes 10:12 or 10:08) was adopted for pictures of clocks and watches because it is symmetric and looks better. Today the symmetric positions are both aesthetic and customary. Other symmetric hand positions are also used, but not as frequently. Examples include 8:20, 8:18, and 2:50. Reviewing some Seth Thomas clock catalog illustrations, I see a gradually increasing symmetry of the hands as the catalogs progress from 1878 to 1940.. . "We always put hands to 10.10 here and in other collections I'm responsible for. The answer is probably quite simply that it looks better, aesthetically and practically, as the clock has a 'smile' on its face (not just a marketing gimmick, it really does look better than a 'down turned mouth' at 8.20) and, as others have said, because it keeps the hands clear of signatures and other subsidiary dials. I note that not every firm uses that position in their marketing though. Synchronome, for example, appear to depict their dials at 3.00." - Jonathan Betts. . "The opinions I've read tend toward 'framing' the maker's name on the clock face. Viz: when the logo is placed above the center, the hands are at 10:10 but when the logo is below the center, the hands are shown at 8:20 framing the maker's name. Wristwatch advertising follows this trend." - Les Lesovsky. . "Thomas A. Frank wrote: '...most manufacturers trademarks are just above the center pipe, and having the hands at 10:10 causes your eye to naturally follow to the trough, thus bringing your view right to the trademark....' and often the Model name is centered under the center pipe, ruling out any hand more or less straight down (between 5 and 7). Date windows most often are at 9 or 3, and subsidiary seconds usually at 6. For aesthetic reasons you want the two hands neither nearly covering each other nor nearly in a straight line. By default the 10h10 looks pretty good." - Fortunat Mueller-Maerki. . "Smile" Theory. It has been suggested that the 10:10 position is used because it resembles a smile.. . "I too have heard the 'smile' theory, which makes some sense from the emotional marketing perspective. Equally likely is the fact that most manufacturer's trademarks are just above the center pipe, and having the hands at 10:10 causes your eye to naturally follow to the trough, thus bringing your view right to the trademark." - Tom Frank
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Store marketers decided many years ago that they should all be set at that time because it resembles a smiley face. Smiling faces spend more money... Best wishes
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They aren't - You just buy them from cheap shops where they don't provide batteries
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Wow, Holy analog, Batman!. This question only applies to wind-up analog watches and print advertisment.. On an analog watch face, 10:10 makes a "Vee" and shows the hands, the quarter-hour positions and all the numbers (with the 10 and 2 only partially obscured). Watch vendors determined that this was "the" way to show the faces and it became standardized as a market tradition. This has carried over as a tradition to digitals in print adds (not always, but often) showing the "10:10". Of course, since they are battery operated nowadays, most watches show "correct time."
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Dunno exactly.... . but it's said that 10:10 is the time at which the clock was invented/made. Therefore all the watches in shops read 10:10.
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I read about this somewhere! It's because the hands sort of make a "smiley face" when they're at the 10:10 position, and therefore the clock looks more attractive to you, i.e. you're more likely to purchase it.
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