The perfect balance and our own subtle nod to what is a fabulous colour for those who know their own mind. The Bloxworth Drunk Tank brings a fun twist to our tested platform and quickly established itself as the new office favourite.
Launch on Thursday 24th July '25
Only 50 available.
It’s grey and pink… in a good way.
A subtle, soft grey wave-embossed dial sets a calm, composed tone, framed by a dusty pink inner chapter ring that adds a delicate pop of colour. That same pink reappears in the bezel’s minute markers, injecting warmth and surprise into the black ceramic 60-minute scale.
The shade? Drunk Tank Pink. It’s worth looking up... known for its calming psychological effects, and unexpectedly pleasing on the wrist.
Every detail is sharp but intentional: a splash of playfulness layered over professional-grade toughness. Underneath, it’s pure Elliot Brown engineered, built to thrive in extremes with quiet, capable refinement.
The crystal is domed, toughened sapphire with a multi-layer anti-reflective coating on the underside, seated cleanly inside a precisely milled 120-click diver’s bezel. We added a highly polished chamfer around the edge to catch the light, echoed in the tiny mirror-finish accents on the lugs.
At 40mm, the case fits comfortably on any wrist. It comes as standard on a rubber strap with a deployant split buckle and boathouse-inspired rope breather lines, or on our steel bracelet. All our 22mm straps fit, including soft yet durable webbing options for effortless day-to-night versatility.
Like every watch we make, this one is punished before it leaves the workshop, pressure tested in water to 200m, with a select few subjected to 3kg pendulum impact testing to prove shock resistance. A five-year warranty comes as standard.
Much like a metal bracelet that starts off at its longest, your rubber strap starts long and is designed to be adjusted to fit.
Allow yourself plenty of time, and try your watch and strap on your wrist before you start cutting to work out how much to shorten the strap by.
Having looked at the strap length on your wrist, if you need to shorten the strap, take the watch off, place it on a soft surface and remove one strap end from the buckle using the pointed tool (included) to push into the holes in the sides of the buckle to release the spring bar. Be careful not to lose the spring bar.
With a sharp knife or scissors, carefully cut just one section from the free end, cutting neatly and carefully along the centre of the first guide groove on the inner surface of the strap at the end nearest the buckle. Don't be tempted to cut two sections at once.
Now refit the strap end back into the buckle depressing the spring bar to locate into the hole position nearest the centre join of the buckle. Use your fingernail or a spring bar tool if you have one.
Now try the strap on your wrist again - it’s surprising how much removing just one rubber section changes the size.
If the strap still needs to be smaller, repeat the above steps, alternating which side you cut down until the strap is the perfect length.
Each time, re-attach the strap using the holes nearest the centre of the buckle so you can always increase the size a little just in case.
The attachment holes in the buckle are half the length of the strap sections so if you end up a tad too tight or a tad too loose, adjust which set of holes the strap attaches to in the buckle until it’s perfect.
It pays to be patient so you don't end up cutting your strap too short. Remember as your body temperature increases, your wrist size will increase too.
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