The Human-Sized Clock "Giga Kletka"

The Human-Sized Clock "Giga Kletka"

This project started with a wild thought in the shower: What if I made a clock… bigger than me? I had no client, no deadline, and no clear plan. Just an idea — and a lot of curiosity. Here’s how it all unfolded.

Like most breakthroughs, this one came to me in the shower 😄
"What if there was a clock... as big as me?"
Whoa. That would be amazing!
But how would I make it? Honestly, maybe it wouldn’t be that hard. I remembered Adam Savage from MythBusters building props from foam, and I’d seen others making large shapes from styrofoam or insulation foam too. It’s a thing.
So I figured — I’ll cut the body of the clock from insulation foam on my CNC (Tsanko), use veneered MDF for the wood section, and even design my own clock mechanism.

I briefly searched for a ready-made oversized mechanism, but quickly gave up. I knew I wouldn’t find exactly what I wanted. And more importantly — if I designed and built my own, I’d learn something new and have a reusable mechanism I could 3D print any time in the future.
So... there was really no reason not to make this clock. Nothing was stopping me.
Sure, I only had a general idea of how it might work, but I’d figure things out as I went. I just needed to start somewhere — and I did, with the one thing I knew would work:

 

Step 1: Buy insulation foam

Why insulation foam? Cheap, easy to cut, and low risk. For just 100 BGN, I got 10 sheets of 3cm, 4 sheets of 2cm, and two cans of foam adhesive.

A few days after the idea hit me, my friend and fellow craftsman Davis stopped by the workshop with his 5-year-old son Philip. I don’t even remember if he came for a reason or just to take a walk. But when I explained my crazy clock idea, he said:
“Let’s go buy the foam right now.”
We jumped in his car (mine couldn’t fit all those sheets) — and that was the start of this project.
Funny how these moments work: if he hadn’t shown up right then, I probably would’ve postponed it by a day… or twenty.

giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress

 

Step 2: Cut the foam

When I first told Natali (my amazing wife who was 9 months pregnant at the time) about the idea — that I wanted to build a clock her size — she got excited and encouraged me to do it.
After we bought the foam, she even helped glue the first half of the clock body together. I had already broken down the model into slices and knew the general plan. We stacked and glued the foam, pressed it flat, and left.

The very next day, I mounted the block onto Tsanko (my CNC), and watching it come to life was magical. For the first time, I didn’t have to imagine a clock that big — it was forming before my eyes. And it looked awesome.

giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress

 

Step 3: Body filler (the messy part)

I rushed into it a bit, using bumper filler for cars. A friend had suggested a mix of white glue and putty, but it didn’t seem strong enough. Bumper filler is tough and elastic — seemed like the right choice.
Natali helped me apply the first layer, but even with a mask the smell was too strong, so I continued alone. The process? Constantly mixing small batches, applying quickly, cleaning tools with acetone, sanding, reapplying, and repeating.
I went through 8 kilograms of filler.
At first, I wanted a smooth, perfect finish. Two days later, I decided the imperfections were actually an effect, not a defect 😄 I did a final smoothing with some acrylic filler, though it might’ve been optional.

giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress

 

Step 4: Paint

The plan was to go full black. But while sanding and filling, both Natali and I fell in love with the raw “stone” look of the unfinished surface. Still, this one was already promised to be black.
I primed it, painted it with black acrylic paint, and sealed it with lacquer. The result? It looked... cheap. Like a wall decoration from a discount store.
So I painted over it again — but acrylic paint without a clear coat is too fragile to touch.
Finally, I found a textured spray for bumpers. And that was it — matte, rough, sandy texture. It looked solid, heavy, and real. I actually started loving it.

giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress

 

Step 5: The mechanism

I’ve been learning Fusion 360 for about a year now — mainly to run Tsanko. It’s an amazing tool, and I wish I’d started using it earlier.
I designed a large custom mechanism (25x25x8cm) using a stepper motor and a controller that moves the minute hand 6° every minute. The hour hand moves separately, powered by gears connecting the two axes. I used bearings for strength, so it can handle even bigger hands if needed.
The result? It worked better than I expected.
It can definitely be improved, but I managed to build something I wasn’t even sure I’d be able to. That alone was enough — not to make me feel proud, but thankful. Fortunate. And maybe a little more confident than before.

oversized wall clock movement mechanism 3d printed design
oversized wall clock movement mechanism 3d printed design
oversized wall clock movement mechanism 3d printed design
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
In order to make the whole system work I used a NEMA 17 stepper motor + driver + ESP32 controller. The minute hand rotates 6 degress every minute by the stepper motor and the hour hand follows it via gear train.

 

Step 6: The result

I’m happy with how the clock turned out. It’s one of those things that, if I saw it somewhere, I’d instantly fall in love with it.
But honestly, after so much time spent thinking, planning, fixing, and reworking — what I felt most was a kind of quiet relief.
Not pride. More like… a sense of "I did it. Finally."
I got through something that felt out of reach when I started — something that kept me awake, excited, and exhausted for a month. It was constantly on my mind.
And the deadline... that was the real monster.
Now that it’s done, I know that with a little distance, I’ll look at it again and appreciate it even more.

giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress
giga kletka oversized clock sculpture work in progress

 

Step 7: It sold before it was even finished

About 10 days after I bought the foam, the graduating class of 2025 from AUBG reached out. They wanted to commission a large clock to gift to their university. Talk about perfect timing!
We talked, they loved the idea, and just like that, the clock had a client — and a deadline. Two weeks.
For those two weeks, I worked nonstop. Even when I wasn’t in the workshop, the clock was in my head.
And once it was done… I was exhausted. But proud. And next week, I’ll install it at their campus.

 

The lesson?

There were moments where I questioned myself — "Am I wasting time doing this, instead of just focusing on selling what I already have?"
But this is one of the best parts of my work: I get to try anything I want. And so many times, when I thought I was doing something “pointless,” it turned out to be exactly the right path — either because it brought money, new skills, or just pure experience.

 

Final thoughts

I’m really glad Natali supported me with this project.
It’s funny — when I started, and friends came by the workshop and saw the foam slices, they’d ask,
“Who ordered it?”
“Who’s it for?”
And I’d say, “No one. I’m just making it. Because I can.” 😄
And I could — I had the time to “waste” on something like this.

It’s interesting how even I sometimes think that doing something just because you want to — not because it’s paid or urgent — feels like a “waste.”
But it’s not.
Ten days in, someone asked for exactly what I had already started. And that’s been the pattern again and again in my work. Just start — and see what comes.

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  • The Human-Sized Clock "Giga Kletka"

    The Human-Sized Clock "Giga Kletka"

    This project started with a wild thought in the shower: What if I made a clock… bigger than me? I had no client, no deadline, and no clear plan. Just...

    The Human-Sized Clock "Giga Kletka"

    This project started with a wild thought in the shower: What if I made a clock… bigger than me? I had no client, no deadline, and no clear plan. Just...

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