Since late last year, I embarked on a new quest, which is to acquire some hidden gems from the early 2000’s, a period which in my opinion is the last time when horology really fired on all cylinders, creating some remarkable unique and functional referenc...
Many congratulations, Zsolt. I really like the legibility, and the interesting and useful set of complications. 42mm looks great on you, and with it being platinum you won’t forget it’s there! All the best, Jon
I remember you posting it back in the day and I was secretly jealous )) That blue strap on yours, brings out the beautiful blue hands of the watch! The only dilemma I have is that on this one, there’s no reference to the water resistance, however the whit...
I couldn't agree more, by the way, as to the state of the mechanical watch industry in the early 2000s. Without consciously intending to, I have managed to accumulate a number of watches originating roughly from 2000-2010, and number quite a few of them a...
While looking at your gems, I instantly noticed something that is missing in today’s horology: Each house had their own identity, each had distinctive designs and personality, in contrary to the modern direction where most focus on blue dials, green dials...
I like the useful complication of the perpetual calendar, with an unusual(at the time), approach and the worry free adjustment forward or backward. Ohh yes, UN designers definitely weren’t cheap with the platinum here ))
They created some insane horological marvels. I wish they would return to this lineage, while I know that was an end of an era… Thank you , let’s keep our hopes up
Brand identity, depth, ergonomics, materials, reliability, all at play in that bygone era! I just can’t rationalize how a one trick pony modern independent can compete with this…?