a free visual timer you can see.
set it, watch the ring empty, and feel the time go by. a countdown you can actually see — for focus sprints, study blocks, breaks, and brains that lose track of the clock.
why a timer you can see helps
time blindness is real: for a lot of us — especially adhd brains — an hour and ten minutes feel the same until they're gone. a plain digit timer asks you to do the math; a visual timer does it for you. the shrinking ring turns an abstract number into something you can feel at a glance, so “later” stops sneaking up on you.
that's the whole idea here — make time visible, then get out of the way. no streaks, no nagging, no shame if the ring runs out before you're done. just start it again.
how to use it
pick a length — 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 45, or 60 minutes — then press start. the ring depletes as the minutes pass and a gentle chime sounds when you reach zero (mute it any time). pause and resume whenever you need to; reset to start the same length over. it runs entirely in your browser, with nothing to install and no sign-up.
a calm timer for focus and study
the 25-minute preset is a ready-made pomodoro timer; the shorter lengths suit a quick reset or a single task, and the longer ones hold a deep-work block. the palette is deliberately calm — dusk, not a flashing red alarm clock — so it can sit on screen without adding to the noise.
part of a calmer day
this timer lives inside done by dusk, a calm daily planner built for adhd brains. its focus mode puts one task and a visible timer on screen and quiets everything else, then rolls anything unfinished gently into tomorrow. start free when you want the timer attached to an actual plan.