.....the purity of the dial and the clarity of the watch is just sublime. For a perpetual, it just kills. The 3450 is a touch rarer and has the added technology of a leap year indicator.... but i actually feel that detracts from the dial aesthetic.
Calling all Patek Philippe experts - one of my main peeves with perpetual calendars is the limited legibility of the dial. FPJ solved it perfectly with his Octa QP, and I noticed the same way of showing the date present in the two models mentioned above (...
There is something about the legibility - I could go for the annual calendar, the almost perfect 5396g, if not for the absolutely mind-boggling hideous date aperture. If they cut this out, and put the day on the moon phase it would have been a perfect wat...
.....the purity of the dial and the clarity of the watch is just sublime. For a perpetual, it just kills. The 3450 is a touch rarer and has the added technology of a leap year indicator.... but i actually feel that detracts from the dial aesthetic.
If you want a more modern reference then you will start in 1981 with 3450 and 3563 but then the subdial with small hands arrived in 1985. If you want a Perpetual Calendar with a better legibility then I think you should look at the 5159 and 5496 introduce...
I would say that, from that picture below, the caliber is clearly not too small for the case. By the way, my opinion is that the way a caliber looks through a sapphire case back is subjective, like the size of a watch on a wrist is. On the front side, the...