A round dial stud in oxidized S925 silver, engraved with Roman numerals and set with a clear faceted center stone.
The face feels like a small clock pulled out of time. Roman marks run around the edge, darkened into the silver so they read like old engraving rather than surface decoration. At the center, the clear stone catches light in fragments — not enough to brighten the whole piece, just enough to interrupt the dark markings for a second.
The shape is simple from a distance: a small round silver stud. Up close, the dial appears. The numerals, the blackened cuts, the thick side profile, the screw-back construction — all of it gives the piece more weight than its size suggests.
At 7.2mm, it sits close to the lobe. Small enough for daily wear. Marked enough to feel like it has already belonged to another hour.
You wear it on an ordinary day. Black jacket, plain tee, no effort to look polished. Someone catches the clear stone first. Then the Roman numerals. Then the feeling that the piece is counting something you don’t need to explain.