In an age when the iPhone is quickly becoming the dominant mobile timepiece, buck the trend by sporting a classic piece of New Yorker imagery on your wrist. The American writer and artist Edward Gorey (1925-2000) produced hundreds of delightfully gloomy pen-and-ink drawings for novels, television, and newspapers during his career, and his spare, mournful figures, somber graveyard settings, and mischievous plotlines are now ubiquitous. After his death, The New Yorker published a full-page illustration of Gorey glory in its May 8, 2000 issue: a captionless scene of languid girls in flapper attire, cavorting with a quartet of vaguely horrifying wolflike silhouettes. One of these odd couples sits down to tea on this watch face, while a horizon of Gorey’s sparse shrubs runs across the pale blue band. Watch face is approximately 1 1/4 inches in diameter. Watch band measures approximately 8 3/4 inches from end to end.