You thought that the 57260 Pocket watch and the new Historiques 1955 Chronograph were the only beauties to be unveiled by the brand these last 2 months?
Well, so did I. But it seems we were wrong (at least I was).
Here are the press-kit pictures with the official details of the two main novelties presented for Watches and Wonders if you want to know more.
There is also something new in the Traditionnelle World Time (material and dial) and Malte (dials) models, but I don't have the supporting material yet.
I love the poetry and warmth of the unique Regulator model. Please note also the combination of the concave bezel together with the rounded case side.
It is made with a lot of taste and it seems that Vacheron Constantin wishes to be active in its communication program, targetting the end of year's celebrations (?)
The Minute Repeater 1731 is gorgeous too in that outfit (the rose gold version was already available since 2013).
A very nice surprise.
Cheers, Mark
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Maitre Cabinotier Perpetual Calendar Regulateur

With the one-of-a-kind Maître Cabinotier Perpetual Calendar Regulator,
Vacheron Constantin showcases its expertise in creating original and
exclusive calibers providing a highly specific time read-off. This
exceptional timepiece is distinguished by its regulator-type display,
inspired by the precision clocks used to adjust watches from the 17th
century onwards. Along with this dissociated display of the hours and
minutes, the 2460 RQP movement specially designed for this model also
drives a major horological complication: the perpetual calendar. An
elegant hand-guilloché dial accentuates the exclusive nature of this
watch certified by the Hallmark of Geneva, crafted in keeping with the
spirit of the 18th century Geneva cabinotiers.
Presented as part of Vacheron Constantin’s Maître Cabinotier collection
composed of exclusive timepieces, the Perpetual Calendar Regulator watch
features a specific regulator-type time display. Its mechanical
self-winding movement, Caliber 2460 RQP, was developed, designed and
assembled by the master-watchmakers of the Manufacture so as to offer a
distinctive reading of the hours and minutes that effectively
complements the perpetual calendar functions. The dissociated indication
of the hours and minutes, ensuring immediate legibility, is inspired by
the regulator-type clock that were used to adjust watches from the late
17th century onwards. Also called “master clocks”, these high-precision
timekeeping instruments served as a point of reference in the
watchmaking workshops and astronomical observatories of the time. An
elegant hand-guilloché dial, reflecting the expertise faithfully passed
on from generation to generation at Vacheron Constantin since 1755,
endows the Maître Cabinotier Perpetual Calendar Regulator with a subtle
aura of refinement, while its meticulous finishing enhances the perfect
clarity of the indications. Created in a one-off edition, this
prestigious timepiece harks back to the tradition of technical
excellence and innovation cultivated by the 18th century cabinotiers.
These highly specialised Geneva artisans in their attic workshops
created authentic made-to-order masterpieces intended for prestigious
customers from around the world. In harmony with this blend of
horological prowess and extreme personalisation, the art perpetuated
through the Maître Cabinotier Collection by Vacheron Constantin is
reflected in the highly exclusive production of its “Atelier
Cabinotiers” which creates bespoke Haute Horlogerie watches.

Precision and legibility at the heart of a distinctive display
Born of the expertise nurtured by the master-watchmakers of the
Manufacture Vacheron Constantin, this unique creation features a
characteristic display of the hours and minutes, inspired by the
regulator clocks that first appeared in the 17th century. With the
Maître Cabinotier Perpetual Calendar Regulator model, Vacheron
Constantin reinterprets this characteristic layout in an exquisitely
refined contemporary spirit. The gold dial adorned with an opaline brown
finish and a hand-guilloché motif provides a dissociated reading of
time, swept over by slender leaf-type hands, “clous de Paris”
hour-markers and Roman numerals. The fine guilloché pattern, epitomising
the savoir-faire and creativity cultivated by Vacheron Constantin the
domain of artistic crafts, calls for finishing work that is up to four
times longer to perform and more demanding than on traditional dials.
Complementing the regulator-type display of the hours and minutes, the
perpetual calendar and the moon phases appear on a snailed counter at 6
o’clock, while the pink gold moon and silver dust stars are sprinkled
across this gently spiralling finish. The pink gold-rimmed day of the
week and month apertures appear on either side of the offset hours
counter at 12 o’clock. The various types of finish – guilloché, opaline,
snailed and circular satin-finished – along with the alternating
presence of applied hour-markers, Roman and Arabic numerals, combine to
ensure excellent readability of each separate indication. This
distinctively designed dial frames a 42 mm-diameter pink gold case that
is water-resistant to 30 metres and topped by a concave bezel that
accentuates the overall impression of slenderness.
New dedicated Vacheron Constantin caliber
Combining sophisticated technical content, contemporary design and
delicate touches of artistic craftsmanship, the Maître Cabinotier
Perpetual Calendar Regulator houses an exceptional mechanical heart. The
new Caliber 2460 RQP was specially designed and developed by the
master-watchmakers of the Manufacture in order to provide a
regulator-type display of the hours and minutes. These indications are
driven by a complex mechanism and the combination of complexity and
original hour display has become an authentic brand signature. Its
inherent originality is enriched by one of the most prestigious
horological complications: the perpetual calendar, indicating the day of
the week, the month, the date, leap years and moon phases. Comprising
334 carefully decorated components, this exclusive ‘motor’ beats at the
frequency of 28,800 vibrations per hour and ensures a 40-hour power
reserve.
The aura of natural distinction exuded by this timepiece is matched by
an alligator Mississippiensis leather strap in a shade echoing that of
the brown dial. Hand-sewn and featuring large square scales, it is
fastened by a triple-blade pink gold folding clasp adorned with a
polished half Maltese Cross.
Building on its originality and its technical refinement, the Maître
Cabinotier Perpetual Calendar Regulator by Vacheron Constantin joins an
exceptional collection of unique creations that are much sought-after
among collectors.
Patrimony Ultra-Thin 1731 Minute Repeater in Platinum with 2 different dials

The creation of striking watches – known to be the most difficult
complications to produce – is an art mastered by very few watchmakers.
For more than two centuries, the Manufacture Vacheron Constantin has
been creating an array of splendid striking watches. In 2013, the Maison
unveiled a true masterpiece of virtuosity in which the complexity of
the striking mechanism was matched by the additional challenge of
creating the thinnest hand-wound calibre and the thinnest hand-wound
minute repeater watch on the market, at respectively 3.9 and 8.1 mm
thick. Initially introduced in 18K 5N pink gold, this timepiece now
appears clothed in a platinum case – framing a silvered opaline or
slate-colored opaline dial – naturally bearing the prestigious Hallmark
of Geneva.
Calibre 1731, a gem of finesse equipped with an innovative device
Calibre 1731 is barely thicker – due to an impressive 65-hour power
reserve – than its predecessor from 1992, measuring a mere 3.90 mm
compared with the original 3.28 mm. It indeed remains the thinnest on
the market to this day, having brilliantly overcome the difficulty of
assembling and adjusting such supremely slimmed-down components. Four
years were needed to solve the highly complex conundrum of creating a
new minute repeater movement mingling slenderness, pure sound, aesthetic
beauty, reliability and sturdiness. Nor are the technical feats
confined to its ultra-thin side of nature, since Calibre 1731 is
equipped with an extremely ingenious device: a flying strike governor
developed by Vacheron Constantin in 2007 for the 2755 movement, another
member of this highly exclusive family of minute repeater calibres.
Unlike classic lever-type governors, this one is entirely silent. Its
role is to steady the rate at which the hammers strike the gongs.
Without such a governor (also known as a regulator), this musical
sequence would play at the speed of the striking barrel-spring and would
thus produce a series of indiscernible notes. The device developed by
Vacheron Constantin comprises two inertia-blocks or weights designed to
act as a brake on the rotating shaft of the governor and thus evening
out the energy supplied by the barrel spring. It achieves this by making
use of opposing centrifugal and centripetal forces. When the governor
spins, centrifugal force pushes one end of the inertia-blocks outwards,
while the other end presses on the shaft to slow it down and stabilise
the rotation speed in order to ensure a steady cadence. Perfectly
finished right down to the smallest details, the governor bears Vacheron
Constantin’s Maltese cross emblem, even though this motif cannot be
seen from the front of the calibre.
The quest for perfect harmony
Particular care was devoted to the acoustics of the Patrimony ultra-thin
calibre 1731, since the sound of a striking watch is its very reason
for being. Various technical choices were made to ensure a crystal-clear
and perfectly tuneful tone. The gongs are not only connected to the
case middle so as to amplify the sound, but also for the first time
stacked rather than placed side by side. The platinum case is shaped so
as to form a unified whole with the movement, within a clever
composition incorporating such subtle parameters as the airflow between
the mechanism and the case, designed to achieve optimal propagation of
the notes. Nor does the quest for perfection end there, since the case
itself has been built without joints so that the elements can interact
metal against metal and thereby enhance the amplitude of the sound,
while the flying governor ensures a regular rate of the hammer blows on
the gongs.
While each master-watchmaker instils his own music into the minute
repeater that he will take several months to assemble and adjust, the
sound of the movement will be submitted to the keen ear of the virtuoso
striking-mechanism specialists of the Manufacture, and will undergo any
adjustments needed to achieve perfect harmony between the low-pitched
and high-pitched notes. And it is precisely at 4:49 that the tests are
performed, since that is the time when the cadence is most clearly
audible due to the almost identical intervals between the hours (four
strikes), quarters (three strikes) and minutes (four strikes).
The true living soul of a minute repeater watch, the individual chime of
each watch is recorded and carefully stored before the timepiece leaves
the Manufacture, thus constituting a “soundprint” duly registered in
the archives of Vacheron Constantin. The latter guarantees not only the
lifelong repair of all its watches, both historical and contemporary,
but also the ability to restore within its workshops the unique sound of
each model equipped with a minute repeater.

The work of a single virtuoso master-watchmaker
For a master-watchmaker, taking part in creating striking watches is a
supreme honour. This is an art that requires great dexterity, a wealth
of experience coupled with infinite patience, along with a truly musical
ear. This means that the circle of watchmakers capable of handling
striking mechanisms is naturally extremely small. At Vacheron
Constantin, only a few gifted artisans working in the “Grandes
Complications” workshop are designated to create such marvels. Before
working for two years under the mentorship of a master craftsman, a
watchmaker must have acquired at least 15 years’ experience in the
various other workshops. For while the minute repeater is probably the
most fascinating of all complications, it is also the most demanding,
due to the high number of tiny parts that must be patiently assembled
and made to interact, before repeatedly setting and adjusting them over
and over – to the point of achieving perfectly smooth operation and an
absolutely pure sound. A single watch takes from three to six months to
assemble and adjust. Concentration is a must at all times, since one
tiny file stroke too many on the base of the gong could muffle its tone.
For his work on such a complex mechanism, the master-watchmakers has
more than 1,200 tools, many of which he has made himself and some of
which have been created to perform a single operation. They form an
impressive panoply, even though the master-artisan’s supreme instrument
remains his own ear. For it is in placing his own personal ‘signature’
during the sound-adjustment phase that he breathes life and soul into
the minute repeater.
Finishes in keeping with the noblest Haute Horlogerie traditions
Testifying to an ancestral expertise that sets an authentic Haute
Horlogerie creation apart from the rest, the components of Calibre 1731
are patiently hand-finished one by one, even though some will remain
hidden. Whereas the mainplate is circular-grained, the hammers are
specular polished to as to alternately catch the light of appeared
clothed in a deep black cloak so as to eliminate any trace of the finely
worked surface. Meanwhile, the bridges are adorned with a delicate
Côtes de Genève pattern creating a refined wave effect. While the
artisans of the Manufacture Vacheron Constantin are well accustomed to
the various finishing techniques, there is one in particular that
requires a highly demanding 18-month training period: bevelling or
chamfering, meaning the specific work on the re-entrant angles, such as
can notably be found on the seven bridges of Calibre 1731.
When case and calibre set new slimness records to form a unified whole
The Patrimony ultra-thin calibre 1731 conceals remarkable complexity
beneath its apparent simplicity. Its design is inspired by an ultra-thin
model created in 1955 to mark the Vacheron Constantin bicentenary and
then revived in 2004 to give life to the Patrimony reference 81180.
Since then, its extreme slenderness, its pebble shape, its curved bezel,
its cambered dial and crystal, its beaded minute circle, along with its
baton-shaped hands sweeping over alternating triangle and baton-shaped
hour-markers, have established it as a timeless classic. While the
Patrimony ultra-thin calibre 1731 has remained true to its iconic design
codes, its platinum case has been the object of subtle and complex
workmanship so as to form a unified whole with Calibre 1731 and to set a
double record: the thinnest hand-wound minute repeater movement (at 3.9
mm), driving the thinnest hand-wound watch (8.1 mm). The curve of the
case middle has thus been accentuated so as to further trim down the
silhouette, while the sapphire crystal caseback has been opened as
broadly as possible to reveal the hammers, along with a rare glimpse of
the gongs. On the dial side, Vacheron Constantin has opted for an
extremely elegant small seconds offset at 8 o’clock, a useful and
playful way of making the Patrimony ultra-thin calibre 1731 immediately
recognisable.

Pure, rare, timeless, the most precious of all metals
Platinum was a precious metal long reserved for royalty and maharajahs.
It continues to convey a definite sense of prestige that is recognised
by a distinguished elite of connoisseurs and collectors. Used since 1820
by the watchmakers of the Maison, platinum has been used for a number
of creations, ranging from the complex to the most original. Its 95%
precious metal composition render it far purer than gold at ‘just’ 75%.
This is not however what sets platinum apart from the other precious
metals: its rarity, its density and its weight make it a material that
is not only prestigious, but also far superior in terms of durability,
resistance and malleability. These qualities mean that a small scratch
on a platinum model merely displaces the metal and thus engenders
minimal loss. A platinum watch thereby maintains its value, as befits a
token of eternity. Resistant to oxidation and the passing of time, this
inalterable metal is synonymous with continuity and ensure its role as a
perfect and enduring lifelong companion.
Such a prestigious complication as the minute repeater, cloaked in the
most precious of all materials, combine to this a supremely complicated
model capable of appealing to the most discerning connoisseurs and
collectors.