I tried on this amazing vintage leather jacket on Saturday. As I was slipping
on the jacket, I instinctively and unconsciously performed a “snap check” – I
looked at the cuffs to see if there were metal snaps and whether the metal
extended through to the inside of the cuff – metal that could come in contact
with my watch (I was wearing a DLC watch at the time). Upon confirming the
presence of potentially harmful metal on the inside of the cuff, I took care to
ensure that the metal snap did not come in contact with my watch.
Anyone
else instinctively perform snap checks?
You think that’s bad. My OCD
does not stop there. Upon purchasing the jacket, I immediately drove to my
tailor and had him sew a cloth patch on the inside of the left cuff over the
metal snap, so that my watch comes in contact with the cloth patch and not the
metal snap. I have done this for every jacket I have with a similar metal snap
exposed on the inside of the cuff. Call it a snap patch.
Anyone else
this demented?
Craig
Don´t be worried , Craig, your precautions are very sensible. I do not have similar problems as my jackets do not have snaps, but if they would ...
Sympathetically,
anaesdoc
I work in a laboratory in white Lab Coats which have pop fastners on the sleeve so I have my left sleeve rolled back about 1 inch to hide the popper. I also look out for rivets or zips on jeans in potentially dangerous positions...my new jeans have a small fasion zip on the left pocket so I can't wear a nice watch when wearing those jeans..!!
Yep OCD is a wonderful thing
Yours,
Andy.
or do they consider your lack of locks sterile enough
jokingly yours
G
LOL..!! But in production you can't wear any jewllery, deoderant, piercings, or make up either, and you have to wear a full tyvek suit with hairnet so no point in wearing a nice watch anyway
All these patients who are fussy about hairs in their tablets..!!
Yours my friend,
Andy.

for a watch addict ... I myself am scared of cuff links, only wear silk knots these days. And do not get me started on plane seat belts, car seat belts, and walking in crowds.
Best
Andreas
Hi Andreas,
I agree that aeroplanes are a risk. So many people moving around in confined spaces, and the overhead lockers and luggage provide plenty of opportunity to catch a watch on something metalic. For seats and seat belts it's either long sleeves or I wrap my arm in the blanket. Even higher anxiety when flying to IGOTT with a watch on each wrist.
A
.. with the rest of you..
- brick/cement walls: I'll definitely move my hand in
- on plane: I normally take my watch off and put it in it's own hip pocket (ie, not sharing it with mobile phone/wallet etc)
- cufflinks: Thank God I don't wear it often, but I am extremely conscious with it and checks it all the time that they're no close to each other.
- doing handy work (house cleaning, gardening etc): I remember to take it off ALL the time.
And this is my worst case, once I went to a all-you-can-eat buffet, and was wearing my Langematik. As I reached into the food containers, I was worried the heat lamp above would be too hot for the watch. So I try to avoid the lamps as much as possible. I know it's crazy.
