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Best Super NEWS Watches

Auction season can sometimes get a little overwhelming. There's a million-dollar this and a record-setting that, and literally hundreds of watches to sort through in order to differentiate those worth bidding on from those that aren't worth a paddle-raise. There are multiple auction houses, sometimes running multiple sales across multiple days, and it can be tough to keep everything straight. So we thought it would be an interesting challenge to sift through it all, and for our editors to each pick one C?yes, just one C watch that they would be bidding on if their finances allowed. The results are, in most cases, true to form, and we think you're going to like our selections. ...

Earlier today we announced the launch of the HODINKEE Magazine, Volume 2. To say we're excited about it is more than a bit of an understatement. With a cover story featuring Apple Chief Design Officer Jony Ive, it also contains tons of other incredible articles, spanning everything from a deep dive into a favorite watch reference to a survey of London's best Brutalist architecture. It's now our pleasure to invite you to a special launch event taking place tomorrow night, May 10, right here in downtown New York City, where we'll celebrate Volume 2 the right way. Come on by for drinks, watch talk, and an all around good time with t...

One of the most delightful booths to visit during Baselworld is that of Jacob & Co., which is an environment in dramatic contrast to most of the others found at the fair. While exhibitors' booths tend to be either rather dourly horological or extravagantly gem-strewn (it's a watch and jewelry show, but with very few exceptions, exhibitors are showing one or the other), at Jacob & Co. you not only get vitrine after vitrine groaning under the carat weight of absurdly oversized diamonds, sapphires, rubies, and emeralds, but also vitrine after vitrine groaning under the horological weight of some of the most extroverted, mechanically complex wrist-mounted entertainments ever to come down...

Parmigiani Fleurier has had a long-standing relationship with Bugatti, going all the way back to 2006, when the Type 370 watch C inspired by the Bugatti Veyron C was first introduced. PF was founded in 1996, so the partnership has taken place over a significant period of the company's overall existence. Since then, the Bugatti lineup from Parmigiani C always featuring a movement with an unusual architecture C has expanded to include further variations on the Type 370, and, more recently, the introduction in 2016 of the Type 390. The Type 390 watch is inspired by the Bugatti Chiron C the successor to the Veyron, also introduced in 2016, at the Geneva Auto Show. The newest version of the Type ...

One very simple way to classify objects is to divide them into two groups: the necessary, and the unnecessary. Objects in the latter exist on a sort of ascending scale of absurdity. At the bottom are things that are not technically necessary, but nice to have C forks, dry-cleaning, soft-yet-strong bathroom tissue, and the like. As you move up the scale, the amount of absurdity goes up while the amount of utility goes down, until you finally arrive at things like minute repeaters, the entire artistic output of Jeff Koons, and flying tanks. This is the domain of the usually (but not necessarily) expensive C of objects designed to answer questions no one asked, and solve problems that don't exi...

Toward the end of 2017, A. Lange & Sohne introduced the Homage To Walter Lange (which was part of its SIHH 2018 presentation). The Homage To Walter Lange was the product of Walter Lange's fascination with a very unusual complication: the independent seconds. This complication is a sort of predecessor to the chronograph C it basically consists of a seconds hand which can be set running, stopped, and set running again, without also stopping the main timekeeping train. The biggest difference between an independent seconds hand and a chronograph is that the latter also has a reset-to-zero function. Lange received a patent for its design for this complication in 1877 and ended up making more ...

Each weekend we're going to bring you a classic HODINKEE story from the archives. Whether it's a story you've already read that deserves another look or a hidden gem that you missed the first time around, we think you're going to enjoy it. Earlier this year, news broke that if you want to get an F.P. Journe Sonnerie Souverain you had better act fast. After December 31, 2018, the Geneva-based watchmaker wills top taking orders for one of its most complicated creations. What will replace it in the collection? Who knows. But, whether or not you're likely to get your name on that waitlist before time runs out, the Sonnerie Souverain is a triumph of modern watchmaking...

Sometimes a watch is just a watch. And that can be a good thing or a bad thing, depending on the make, model, design, and technical merits. But then there are watches that are much more than little mechanical keepers of time C this is one such watch. This special little Omega, with its well-worn dial, belonged to one of the most famous men of the 20th century and someone who left an indelible mark on popular culture. This is Elvis Presley's wristwatch and now it's hitting the auction block at Phillips in Geneva. The diamonds are the perfect size for this watch. Let's do a quick overview of this watch's history before getting i...

Having recently expressed some curiosity about why cosmetics and brand names seem to rule the roost when it comes to high value in vintage watch auctions, I felt it incumbent on me to look around and see what I could find coming up in Geneva this weekend that represents, in one way or another, high interest from a more strictly horological standpoint. The results were actually quite heartening (now, again, I have to emphasize, people collect for all sorts of reasons and if you find your personal sun rises and sets on PNDs, there is no more to be said than god bless and go in peace, the sermon is ended). At Christie's, for instance, the catalog is chockablock full of some great examples from ...

The first half of Geneva Watch Auction: Seven is now over, and the last lot of the evening was a big one: Elvis Presley's Tiffany-dial, diamond-set Omega. It was hard going into today's sale to know what price this watch would achieve, since provenance like this doesn't show up every day, but the final results are quite a bit more than many expected. All in, Elvis's Omega sold for $1,812,500, breaking the record for any publicly sold Omega.?It's pre-sale estimate was just a fraction of that, at $52,900 to $106,000. Elvis's watch breaks the record of $1.4 million set by a rare Omega tourbillon at the Phillips Geneva: Six auction last November. In the pantheon of "...

Midway through day two of Geneva Watch Auction: Seven, this unique A. Lange & Sohne 1815 "Homage To Walter Lange" just sold for $852,525 all in (on a hammer price of CHF 700,000). Phillips had listed this watch with an "estimate on request," and as with any highly desirable unique piece, it's almost impossible to predict how things will play out. However, just knowing that this is Lange we're talking about should have given you a clear indication that the final number wasn't going to be something disappointing. The world of rare Lange watches is a heady one, and that only gets more intense when the watches are in stainless steel. Past results have been strong...

There are certain moments in your life as a watch collector that you just don't forget. The first time you strap on a vintage Rolex. The first time you hear a truly exceptional minute repeater. They're milestones that also set the tone for everything that comes after. I can say, without reservation, that the afternoon I got to spend with Ren Beyer in the Uhrenmuseum Beyer is one of those moments for me.Ren represents the eighth generation of his family's involvement in the watch and jewelry industry, which started with the founding of their store in Switzerland way back in 1760. In case you need a little perspective, this means that Beyer family members have been selling watches since befo...

Next week is the 8th edition of what's become both a tradition and institution for horological enthusiasts in and around the Big Apple: Madison Avenue Watch Week, during which the participating boutiques welcome both old friends and new, and create a variety of experiences designed to both educate and fan the fires of horological enthusiasm. In addition to offering a first-hand first look at some of the latest introductions from Baselworld and SIHH, you'll have an opportunity to participate in everything from a hands-on class in watchmaking at the Jaeger-LeCoultre boutique, to a chance to meet custom leather strap maker Jean Rousseau at Vacheron Constantin.? ...

There is something about the annual calendar complication that has always seemed especially appropriate for Lange. The perpetual calendar is a wonderful thing and Lange does nice things with it (as they do with just about everything), but it's always seemed a little fussy, a little high maintenance; in a word, a little French, for Lange. The annual calendar by contrast has a pragmatic C shall we say, Teutonic C character that seems to suit Lange down to the ground, as if it's saying, "Oh, by all means, if turning the crown once a year is too fatiguing, do throw away money on a perpetual calendar. I'll be right over here when you decide to be sensible." ...

Well, today might have been all about the Rolex Daytona, with the Phillips Daytona Ultimatum sale resulting in several million-dollar-plus sales, including that of the second most expensive Rolex, ever. Images courtesy Phillips But the afternoon also gave us a new record for an Omega Speedmaster. Minutes ago at Phillips Geneva, the hammer fell on an excellent-looking Omega Speedmaster reference 2915-1 "Broad Arrow," the first-generation of Omega Speedmasters. The new record is $408,500, breaking through the previous record of $275,508 we saw at Bukowski's in Sweden last year. It shouldn't necessarily come as a huge surprise to...

The venn diagram of people interested in watchmaking and people who think 3-D printing is cool is probably not that far off from a perfect circle. Nerds are nerds, right? Way back in 2014 we showed you a 3D-printed tourbillon, the Tourbillon 1,000%, created by our very own Nicholas Manousos. It required a bit of human power to operated, but was, as far as we know, the first experiment of its kind. Later, the Christophe Laimer Tourbillon took things another step, acting as a fully operational 3D-printed tourbillon clock. Now, via a story from Popular Mechanics, we've found yet another experiment in 3D-printed timekeeping: a triple-axis tourbillon inspired by one of contemporary horology's gre...

In case you missed the big news last week, we released Volume 2 of the HODINKEE Magazine C and with Apple's Jony Ive on the cover, no less. To kick things off the right way, we hosted a little launch party in New York City and the response was incredible. Over 200 of you came out to lower Manhattan to hang out with our team of editors, to enjoy a HODINKEE Shop pop-up, and to toast Volume 2 along with us (and to browse through copies of the magazine, of course). As always, there were some pretty incredible watches on wrists, and we wanted to share them with you here.A big thank you to everyone who came out to show their support C including the number of people who told us they traveled to New...

What we have here today is something pretty rare: a new brand within the Richemont Group that is being created from scratch rather than acquired from outside. Baume will be the new entry level offering in Richemont's watch portfolio, and the brand's goals are to reach a new audience by offering customization options and watches created through sustainable manufacturing processes. Two different options in the Custom Timepiece Series. For pretty much anyone reading HODINKEE, the name "Baume" probably sounds familiar C it comes from the first half of Richemont brand Baume & Mercier. So, are the two related? Well, kind of. The...

The last few days have been host to a handful of high-profile watch auctions in Geneva from all the major auction houses, including Christie's, Phillips, and Sotheby's. More Rolex records were set, a superstar's special watch blew its estimate out of the water, and a unique steel Lange got collectors' paddles flying. It was a big weekend. We thought it would be worthwhile now, with the sales all finished up, to have each of our editors look back over the last few days to see what they think we can learn about the watch market more broadly from the results, whether it's what watches are hot, what bargains you should be looking out for, or what came as the biggest surprises. ...

In 1993, IWC launched the Doppelchronograph C a rattrapante (splitCseconds) chronograph with a complication, designed by Richard Habring, built on a heavily modified Valjoux 7750 base. The movement, IWC caliber 79230, was a very unusual piece of engineering, in that, unlike other rattrapante chronographs, both start, stop, and reset, as well as the split function, were coordinated with lever-and-cam systems. The base Valjoux 7750 is a non-column-wheel chronograph, of course; its designer, Edmond Capt, intended it to be both economical to produce and very sturdy. In the decades since its introduction, it has proven to be exactly that. One major cost-savings was the omission of the column whee...

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