Having purchased this indoor/outdoor clock in July 2010, it has graced my home for some 15 months now. Mine is a slightly different model to the one pictured, with nicer arrow-shaped hands, but it appears exactly the same in all other respects.
The trend these days seems to lean towards enormous wall clocks, much bigger than I want or need, so I've been more than happy with the compact size of this one. It has a dainty old-fashioned charm about it. The swivelling face makes it a particularly good choice for the corner of a room or garden, since it can be angled whichever way you want. (Mine is angled towards the centre of my living room, where I can see it from pretty much everywhere.) At just 12cm in diameter, the clock face is small, but the simplicity of it makes it easy to read from a distance - less so, perhaps, from the far end of a 100ft garden, but there's no shortage of larger garden clocks to choose from if that's important to you.
This clock is made of metal with a dark brown finish loosely resembling rust, but much smoother with none of the flakiness associated with genuine rust. Being metal, it's quite a heavy item for its size, and both feels and looks well finished. As for putting it up: drill a couple of holes, insert rawl plugs, screw in screws so that they're almost flush with the wall, then slot on your clock. Having done all this with care, I've found it to be perfectly firm and sturdy with no wobble, although admittedly my living room doesn't suffer the worst excesses of the British weather.
The clock keeps good time, the (centigrade only) thermometer on the reverse face seems accurate, and the tick is barely audible. If only they'd kept the traditionally-shaped hands that mine's got - so much more in keeping with the style of the clock - I'd have given it five stars, not four!