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Just About Watches Podcast

Author: Kev Green

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The Deep Dive by Just About Watches isn’t just another watch talk—it’s where horology meets psychology, storytelling, and sharp insight. Each episode builds on the articles written by Kev Green, the founder of Just About Watches, a professional writer and psychologist with a lifelong passion for timepieces.


Through both written pieces and audible narratives, Kev explores the world of watches from every angle—unpacking the craft of legendary watchmakers, dissecting the strategies of major brands, guiding collectors on how to care for their timepieces, and offering impartial reviews that cut through the noise. What sets The Deep Dive apart is Kev’s unique ability to weave psychological perspective into horological discussion, turning every subject into a richer, more thought-provoking journey.


9 Episodes
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There is something almost sacred in the quiet pause before a watch box opens. It is theatre without an audience, ritual without a priest, yet no less ceremonial for its intimacy. Whether the lid is hinged like a stage curtain or peeled back with the delicacy of wrapping paper, there is always a moment of suspended time before the watch itself is revealed. That pause is important; it is charged with expectation, with the thrill of culmination. The object you have dreamed of, researched to the ...
Is a smartwatch really a watch? At first, the answer seems almost insultingly obvious. It straps onto the wrist, it shows the time, and the word “watch” is baked right into the name. But the simplicity of that logic quickly unravels when we begin to consider what the word has historically meant, and what it still means to those of us who approach horology as more than mere function. A watch has always been more than a gadget; it is a cultural symbol, a vessel of continuity, and an artefact of...
Few topics in horology trigger more heated arguments than the subject of watch modifications. To some, the practice of modding is a creative playground where enthusiasts can reshape a watch into something truly personal, whether it’s swapping a dial, changing hands, or building an entire “Frankenwatch” from spare parts. For these collectors, mods are an art form, a way of taking a canvas provided by a brand and reinterpreting it through their own imagination. It’s an expression of individuali...
The dial is often called the “face” of a watch, but it is far more than a backdrop for hands and markers. It is a carefully orchestrated stage where psychology meets engineering, and where beauty is balanced against function. Every decision—whether it’s the width of an index, the shade of a sunburst finish, or the placement of a sub-dial—shapes not only how a watch is read, but how it is felt. Designers must weigh legibility against allure, symmetry against daring asymmetry, and tradition aga...
The chronograph is one of those complications that seems deceptively straightforward at first glance—a set of pushers, a sweeping seconds hand, perhaps a pair of subdials, all designed to time an event. Yet beneath that veneer of utility lies a story woven through secrecy, rivalry, innovation, and even a touch of myth. The chronograph is more than a stopwatch in a wristwatch; it is a mechanical monument to human obsession with measuring time in finer and finer slices. Its path to ubiquity is ...
Magnetism is one of the most underestimated threats in horology, an invisible force that quietly wreaks havoc on the precision of mechanical watches. Unlike knocks, water, or scratches, it leaves no obvious trace—yet a single encounter with a magnetic field can send a timepiece running wildly fast, slow, or even stop it altogether. Dubbed the hidden assassin of accuracy, magnetism is all around us in daily life, from smartphones and laptops to handbags and speakers, making it an ever-present ...
The story of dive watches can’t be told without two names surfacing again and again: Rolex and Blancpain. Each laid claim to the depths in its own way, and together they defined what a true diver’s watch should be. Blancpain’s Fifty Fathoms set the template in the early 1950s, designed hand-in-hand with military divers who demanded absolute reliability under water. Rolex followed closely with the Submariner, a watch that not only conquered oceans but also transcended them, becoming a cultural...
For centuries, the watch itself has been a marvel of engineering, but what about its silent partner? The humble watch strap has a story all its own—a tale of innovation and style that reflects our changing world. Once a simple leather band born of military necessity, the strap has evolved into a vital part of the modern timepiece, a statement of personality expressed through a diverse range of materials from rugged nylon to sophisticated steel.
A discussion on the silent power of branding and logos.
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