with such a tonneau-cushion case and a seconds hand are the following ones. Best, Emmanuel Ref. 3585 www.watchprosite.com credit: analog shift Ref. 5950 & 5951 www.watchprosite.com Ref. 3670A www.watchprosite.com credit: @timvaux Ref. 5275P credit: antiqu
and for emphasizing the beauty of the bezel, which your pictures show wonderfully. Jon Bues has written an interesting article for Hodinkee on the caliber 350, which seems to have been the first ever peripherally winding movement. So the 3585 is really a
The Patek Philippe ref. 3585 has had multiple variants, among which some had an electric blue textured dial with ‘ x-strokes ’ or crosshatch or crossed shard-like pattern. As you will see below, some examples have a dial which has turned tropical . And if
Thank you also for sharing your knowledge about the yellow/blue moon disc of the early versions: it’s a detail I didn’t know at all. I definitely like the design of this watch: no tachymeter scale, Breguet numerals and hands, cushion-shaped case: it’s ver
Hope you'll be able to find some elements on our Patek Philippe forum. I don't know if there is such website, listing all Patek's references available on the net. Most of the work which has been trying to make an overall view of Patek's collection is main
Hi Alex, ...and maybe there are some more ref. with so called back winder feature. As far as I know all of them sporting the cal 350. Here are some pictures, all pictures courtesy of Antiquorum: 3563 3569 3573 3585 3586 I hope I didn't confuse any of the
is this your watch? scan courtesy of Antiquorum In the past auctions this piece has been going for $4000-$6000 so I guess you got it at market price. However I have no idea if its a good investment. Never buy a watch as an investement but only for the ple