How to Wear a Watch: A Complete Guide
Watch Guide
Putting a watch on takes two seconds. Getting it right takes a little more thought. The wrist you choose, where it sits, how tight the strap is, whether the case size actually suits your wrist — these things add up. A watch that fits well disappears into the day. One that doesn't, you notice constantly. This guide covers each decision in order.
What Wrist Should I Wear My Watch On?
There's more to it than sliding a watch onto your wrist and fastening the strap. Which wrist, how high it sits, how loose the strap is — each of these affects whether a watch stays comfortable across a full day or becomes something you keep fidgeting with. This guide covers the basics, plus how strap choice changes the whole experience.
Case Size Relative to Wrist Size
Case diameter is the number most people look at first, but it only tells part of the story. Lug-to-lug distance has just as much impact — a watch with extended lugs can reach well past the wrist edge even at a moderate case diameter.
As a starting point: wrists under 15cm generally suit cases between 28mm and 34mm. 15cm to 17cm fits well in the 34mm to 40mm range, which covers most everyday sizing for both men and women. Above 17cm, 40mm and above tends to sit proportionally.
These aren't fixed rules. Case shape, thickness, and strap type all affect how a watch actually reads on the wrist. A slim case at 38mm can wear smaller than a thick case at the same diameter, and a leather strap often makes a case read differently than a metal bracelet does.
How to Measure Your Wrist Size
Wrap a flexible tape measure around your wrist just above the wrist bone — the same spot you'd wear the watch. Note the measurement in centimetres where the tape meets itself.
No tape measure: a strip of paper or a piece of string works the same way. Wrap it, mark the overlap point, then lay it flat against a ruler.
One thing worth knowing: watch brands size straps by lug width, usually between 18mm and 22mm. That's the gap between the lugs where the strap attaches, not the strap length. Strap length adjusts to fit most wrist sizes within a standard range, so lug width is what you need to match when buying a replacement strap.
Watch Types for Different Occasions
Not every watch works in every setting. A dive watch at a formal dinner reads the same way a dress watch does at the beach — technically fine, but slightly off. Here are four types with specific LOBOR examples for each.
Sun and Moon Automatic Watch — best for formal settings with a refined sense of detail
A sun and moon watch adds a layer of detail on the dial that becomes more noticeable the longer you look at it. It feels more expressive than a minimalist watch, but still stays within a controlled and balanced design language. This makes it well suited for formal and smart-casual settings such as work meetings, dinners, or occasions where you want something slightly more distinctive without being loud. It brings visual interest to the wrist while still feeling composed in the overall look.
Skeleton Watch — best when you want the watch to stand out
Skeleton watches reveal the movement underneath the dial, which naturally draws attention and gives them more visual weight than traditional designs. Because of that, they tend to work better when paired with simpler outfits, allowing the watch to become part of the styling rather than competing with it. It’s the kind of watch that feels more expressive, where the design itself becomes the main detail on the wrist.
Dive Watch — best for water activities and active use
Dive watches are built around water resistance and durability, designed to perform in environments like swimming, beach use, and travel where exposure to water is expected. Features such as a screw-down crown, unidirectional rotating bezel, and 10ATM water resistance ensure the watch is secured and functional even in more demanding conditions, while luminous markers and a clear dial layout improve readability in low-light situations.
Quartz Watch — best for simple, low-maintenance daily wear
Quartz watches focus on reliability and convenience. With battery-powered movement, they don’t require winding or frequent adjustment, making them easy to wear day to day without extra maintenance. This simplicity makes them a practical choice for everyday use, especially if you prefer something straightforward that just works quietly in the background without needing attention.
Leather Watch Strap vs Mesh Watch Band: Which Should You Choose?
The same watch on a leather watch strap versus a mesh watch band genuinely looks and feels like two different watches. Worth understanding what each actually does.
Leather watch strap
New leather is stiff. After a few weeks of daily wear it softens and starts conforming to the shape of your wrist, which is why people who've worn the same leather watch strap for a year often say it fits better than it did new. The downside is maintenance. Leather doesn't like prolonged water exposure, needs occasional conditioning, and dries slowly when it gets wet. In summer it also traps more heat against the skin than metal does.
Mesh watch band
A stainless steel mesh watch band is lighter than a solid link bracelet and more breathable than leather. The woven construction moves with the wrist rather than sitting rigid, and the sliding clasp adjusts to any position rather than being fixed to specific holes or link intervals. Lower maintenance than leather, easier to size precisely, and more comfortable in warm weather. Works across formal and casual outfits without much thought.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. The left wrist default comes from most people being right-handed, not from any actual rule. Wear it on whichever wrist gets in the way less.
One finger should fit under the strap without forcing. If two fit easily it's too loose; if one won't fit it's too tight. Marks on your skin after wearing are the clearest sign it needs loosening.
Leather watch straps work well across formal and casual settings and improve with wear, but need more care and don't handle water well. A mesh watch band is lower maintenance, more breathable, and easier to size precisely. For most people's daily use, mesh requires less thought.
Yes, noticeably. Leather molds to your wrist over time so the fit gradually improves. A mesh watch band sizes precisely from day one and stays consistent. Leather runs warmer in summer. The difference is significant enough that switching straps on the same watch is worth trying before buying a second watch.