---
TATTOO MEANINGS / TIME & MORTALITY
Time, mortality, living in the moment, urgency
Origin: Victorian, Global
Clock tattoos are reminders that time is finite — live now. A working clock face suggests punctuality and the passage of life; a broken or melting clock (in the style of Dalí) represents timelessness and defiance of mortality. Clocks often mark a specific hour that mattered.
Victorian "memento mori" jewelry used clocks and watches to remind the wearer of life’s brevity. In tattoo art, a clock paired with a rose or skull balances time with beauty or death. A clock set to a meaningful time (a birth, a loss) personalizes the piece.
The most personal clock tattoos show a specific time — a child’s birth hour, the moment of a loss, or a wedding time. The hour turns a generic symbol into a private landmark.
Pairing a clock with a skull is the classic "remember you must die" motif. It is not morbid but grounding — a prompt to spend time on what matters. Add a rose for beauty-amid-impermanence.
pocket watch
broken clock
melting clock
clock and rose
clock and skull
Source: Wikipedia — Clock
Find, price, and book the design you're exploring.
Clock tattoos symbolize time, mortality, living in the moment, urgency. Clock tattoos are reminders that time is finite — live now. A working clock face suggests punctuality and the passage of life; a broken or melting clock (in the style of Dalí) represents timelessness and defiance of mortality. Clocks often mark a specific hour that mattered.
Clock tattoo imagery traces back to Victorian, Global. Clock tattoos are reminders that time is finite — live now. A working clock face suggests punctuality and the passage of life; a broken or melting clock (in the style of Dalí) represents timelessness and defiance of mortality. Clocks often mark a specific hour that mattered.
Victorian "memento mori" jewelry used clocks and watches to remind the wearer of life’s brevity. In tattoo art, a clock paired with a rose or skull balances time with beauty or death. A clock set to a meaningful time (a birth, a loss) personalizes the piece.
Get matched with the right meaning and style for your next tattoo.
Start Your Studio Free →Tattoo meanings are shaped by culture, history, and personal story — they are not universal or fixed. Sacred designs (e.g. Polynesian tatau, Indigenous, or religious iconography) carry deep meaning for the communities who created them; we share this for education and ask that you research and respect their origins before wearing them. This guide is not a substitute for cultural consultation.
See also our Color & Style Meaning Guide for how color and technique change a design's meaning.
EEAT: Written by InkFlow Editorial Team (Practicing tattoo artists & studio operators). Reviewed by Sam P., Script & memorial specialist, 10 yrs. Cultural and historical information is sourced from academic references and is provided for educational purposes. Meanings vary across traditions and interpretations.