We are glad to announce that the Clockwork Watch Shop is OPEN!
It’s the best place to find all Clockwork Watch graphic novels, comic art and much more.
Kindly check it out!!!
We are glad to announce that the Clockwork Watch Shop is OPEN!
It’s the best place to find all Clockwork Watch graphic novels, comic art and much more.
Kindly check it out!!!
SciFi Pulse caught up with the Clockwork Watch team at Thought Bubble Comic Con in Leeds. Here are Jennie and Corey giving the lowdown on the project.
Monsters and Critics catches up with Clockwork Watch Creator Yomi Ayeni att he Thought Bubble Comic-Con in Leeds… Thanks to Ian Cullen for taking the time and having the interest in our project.
Huge thanks to James Bacon for this great review!
Congratulations to Haley Moore for nailing the crowdfunding of her project “Laser Lace letters“.
We would like to thank all our patrons for the continued support – together we are making history!
Huzzah!!!
We are eight months into a 5-year long story and Clockwork Watch is attracting a lot of interest from around the world. Thank you so much for helping to start the process, your support is the reason we’ve been able to carry on with the adventure.
We understand that Clockwork Watch is a content heavy experience, and with so many people contributing to the narrative, things can often be overlooked or overshadowed. With this in mind we have produced the Clockwork Watch: Breakaway Preview 2013, a limited edition review of the story so far, which includes photographs from the Tomorrow’s World… Today! event. The book also acts as a preview to our next graphic novel, Breakaway.
There are only 50 copies available, initially we are offering the actual books to people that came to the Tomorrow’s World… Today event, and are featured in the photographs within it; however, the remaining copies are up for grabs!
Download a digital version of the book for free.
Part two of Clockwork Watch starts very soon, but in which country???
Thank you!!!!
Clockwork Watch Team
Viva Thought Bubble Comic Con 2012! We had a great time and a very receptive panel. The launch of Clockwork Watch: Breakaway Preview was perfect. Thank you to all the peeps that made us feel at home in Leeds, and the many that visited our tables. Photographs are in our Gallery.
Huzzah For Science!
Clockwork Watch Timeline
Part One
May 1899
Britain is in the grip of a recession, society has fallen on hard times, the gap between ‘haves and have nots’ grows wider by the day. A decline in trade, power shortages and the inability to manufacture energy-efficient products leaves British industry in the doldrums, but on a local level the amateur maker and boffin ethos thrives. People begin to innovate and experiment at home, creating a thriving cottage industry of inventors and alchemists. They begin to adorn and augment everything they own with mechanical objects.
Queen Victoria looks to science for a miracle and the Department for the Advancement of Sciences takes up the challenge. While developing artificial limbs for veterans of the Saryn War, they hatch plans to create a mechanical device – a clockwork servant – but fail to find a sustainable power source. Read More:
First – the Word – 1766:
Enlightenment arrives as people take to the skies in balloons, they are no longer constrained by geography. The first commercial dirigibles are launched in 1785. Traders from India travel the Silk Road, bringing with them the substance that will later become known as Ambinium – a rock that floats when treated with simple acids.
Cities in the Sky – 1800:
The experiments on Ambinium and the development of airships leads to sky cities – large vessels that can dock and stay off the ground for long periods. This affluent move into the clouds is to exploit the benefits; with no houses, there is no tax, trade is free and above the law. Gambling finds a new home.
Sky Piracy – 1815:
The arrival of sky pirates soon puts paid to the golden age of airborne life. With no law enforcement or other defence, the floating palaces are sitting targets. People begin arming themselves and the “Air Wars” begin.
Air Tax – 1817:
To close the loophole exploited by dirigible owners, the government passes a law which taxes tethered aviation. The revenues generated, the government claims, are being used to fund the war against sky pirates.
Reformation – 1840:
A schism occurs within the Church of England. The debated doctrine is believed to encourage the continuation of occult-like practices. The debate gives rise to the Aesthetics movement. The Church survives the schism, but purges many Aesthetics. They are labelled heretics and in some remote villages, burnt at the stake.
Saryn – 1872:
The war that wasn’t. A strange new mineral is discovered in Saryn, in the outer regions of Kazakhstan. On the advice of scientists, British troops traipse halfway across the world to protect the nation’s mining rights. In the brutal conditions, fewer than 2% the soldiers reach the front line. Of those that make it, only a handful return. The mineral is never mined and the supposed life-enhancing properties of the substance are never properly investigated. Scarred by loss, the country would rather forget about the war. In response, MP’s within the House of Lords label Science “the widow-maker”.
Details about the next instalment of Clockwork Watch…
20 years after the events of The Arrival, our second graphic novel Breakaway shows Britain in the grips of a violent transformation. Clockwork servants are all the rage. Although this new Clockwork life is not as easy as the government foresaw it to be… and at the crackling centre of the ticking time-bomb that is British society, an embittered Janav Ranbir wants to tear everything down…