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Best Super NEWS Watches

Its been a good week in the world of vintage watches (if I do say so myself), and I think youll agree. eBay proved to be a great source over the past few days, with finds including a top quality Gallet Multichron and a Multi-Centerchrono from Mido. As youd expect from eBay, the photos are hilariously bad, but the watches certainly are not. In addition, weve got an accessibly priced piece from Doxa featuring a striking set of lugs, and a top tier Rolex Explorer, complete with a gilt, chapter-ring dial. If conventional watchmaking isnt exactly your bag, then direct your attention towards the Swatch that resembles a pepper. Long story. Youll find out below. Lets get down to it, shall we?...

Subscribe to the show: (Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, TuneIn). Already heard it once or twice? Please leave a short review here, and tell us which guests we should have on! All of us have certain people in our lives who seem to keep popping up over and over again, no matter where you go, who youre with, or what youre doing. George Glasgow, Jr. is one of those people for me. Hes the proprietor of Londons George Cleverley, arguably the finest maker of bespoke shoes in the world. Name me a famous or important person from the last 75 years or so and I almost guarantee you they had a pair or two of Cleverleys in their closet. At l...

There is much to be said both for and against the trend in recent years to make watches inspired by, or derived directly from, vintage watches. While not every such watch is a hit, they often have the odds stacked in their favor in that at the very least, they give a sense of connection to the history of wristwatch design and development, rather than going for a novelty effect that will soon wear thin. Drawing from the vintage design cue playbook, the latest from Mido is the Multifort Patrimony, which features a box sapphire crystal, syringe hands, and a pulsometric scale, and which also has a very respectable (especially at this price point) movement: the Mido caliber 80 (ETA C07.621 base) ...

You might have noticed coming out of SIHH that there were quite a few new Submersible models at Panerai. These included a series of limited editions whose purchase will net their buyers once-in-a-lifetime travel and exploration experiences with world-famous explorers and organizations like Panerai ambassador Mike Horn and the Italian Marina Militare. While the below, non-limited watches may not come with exotic experiences, they represent a great look and size for the Submersible range.?The dive watch that we have here today is the most basic of all the new Submersibles presented this year. It's the Panerai Submersible 42mm, which takes its place as Panerai's flagship tool watch for diving.?...

While this is a watch that you almost certainly didn't expect to see from Laurent Ferrier, the Tourbillon Grand Sport is all about celebrating a trio of anniversaries that are integral to the creation and perspective of the brand. So forget what you know about LF C this watch is LF through and through. The three crucial events this piece celebrates are the 1979 running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, in which Laurent Ferrier and brand co-founder Fran?ois Servanin placed third overall; the 2009 founding of Laurent Ferrier as a brand; and the 2009 conception of the brand's first tourbillon, which has become its calling card. Yeah, there's a lot wrapped up in this one. ...

Digging through the archive this week we found an old-school post that we'd totally forgotten about. How cool is this creation, though? It's a pinhole camera that uses a Unitas 6497 hand-wound watch movement to mechanically control the shutter mechanism. Designed and hand-made by a photographer named Kwanghun Hyan, this mechanical marvel creates interesting images and must feel incredible to hold and shoot.? With the original post being nearly six years old (and linking to a more in-depth article from the guys at Worn & Wound), I figure there is a good chance many of you have never seen this photographic oddity, so dig in and...

This is one of the stranger stories I've chased down in a while. When I first stumbled upon this watch in the catalog for Antiquorum's upcoming Geneva sale (happening this Saturday, May 11), I was sure it had to be a fake. I mean, look at it! A stainless steel Patek Philippe Aquanaut prototype that actually says "prototype" right on the dial? How could that be real? But then I started talking to experts, asking collectors what they thought, and it turns out we might be looking at something truly special here. Consensus is that this unique Aquanaut is the real deal C or at least mostly the real deal. The Aquanaut launched back in 1997 with the reference 5060. It's...

Originally previewed earlier this year (hence the snow in a few of the photos), Oris has announced the official launch of the first non-limited Divers Sixty-Five chronograph. Essentially a mix of the format previously established by the bronze Carl Brashear chronograph of 2018 crossed with the general look and feel of the 40mm steel and bronze Diver Sixty-Five, the new Diver Sixty-Five Chronograph is 43mm in steel with bronze and rose gold accents.? The Brashear limited editions (one chronograph, one time/date diver) have proven to be hot tickets within the Oris mind share so it was really just a matter of time until the brand decided to offer a non-limited expre...

Last week, I published this story about the unique Vacheron Constantin minute repeater with retrograde calendar hitting the block this upcoming weekend at Phillips in Geneva. Since then, I've had a number of great conversations with Christian Selmoni, the style and heritage director at Vacheron Constantin about this watchs story and why it's so special. One of the things that sets the so-called "Don Pancho" apart is how meticulous the documentation is on the backend. This both allows us to have faith in the authenticity of the watch and enabled Vacheron to restore the movement and create the new dial in faithful ways. You gotta love people who keep good records.?Christian was kind enough to...

If you are into fashion (or red carpets), then you were probably following along at last night's Met Gala in New York City. Each year the Metropolitan Museum of Art hosts the fundraising Costume Institute Gala chaired by Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour. The Gala has become quite the spectacle and has surpassed the red carpet of the Oscars, the Golden Globes, and the Emmys in the fashion world due to the no-rules attitude and avant garde themed outfits.?This year the theme was "Camp." No, not camp as in camp-ing, camp as in extravagance with a sense of humor. And while I don't think the majority of the celebrities understood this theme (to be fair, I'm still trying to grasp it myself), mos...

For the most part, when flipping through auction catalogs you're greeted by variations on themes. Sure, this season's top Submariner might be a little nicer than last season's (or not) or the dial on that Patek Philippe ref. 2526 is double-signed and paired with a stellar bracelet. Those watches are great, believe me, but sometimes I find myself searching for something new. I want something fresh to sink my teeth into. This go-around, Phillips delivered big time, offering up two watches by 20th century master George Daniels, just two lots apart from one another, in the same auction. On the more extreme end is the one and only Daniels Grand Complication Pocket Watch, which has only been seen ...

It can be more than a little numbing to read watch auction results nowadays C the numbers seem to just keep getting bigger, and the same names, same models, and a lot of the time, the same watches keep coming up, with more and more narrow (and almost exclusively cosmetic) distinctions commanding bigger and bigger bucks.?I haven't been sure how to feel about this for years, and I have misgivings complaining too much about the good old days. First of all, we all have something (often more than one thing) that we like to spend money on, that is indefensible from any sort of reasonable standard of utility. Secondly, as someone who remembers when there was no watch in...

Subscribe to the show: (Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, Google Play). Already heard it once or twice? Please leave a short review here, and tell us what topics you'd like us to chat about.? We made it to 80! Thanks for tagging along. In this episode, the boys dig into a question from a listener that considered what happens when a vintage watch becomes too valuable to continue its life as a sport watch, possibly forcing the change of context into becoming a pure collectible. As you can imagine, Jason and James want nothing more than for all of you to wear your watches and enjoy life's adventures, but there is definitely a turning point wher...

When I think of Roger Smith, I think of uncompromising regard for the details, a near virtuosic technical mastery, and a direct link to the great George Daniels.? In a recent post to his website, Smith talks about his very first production watch, the rectangular, unnumbered Series 1, which the watchmaker created in 2001.? Smith is exhibiting the Series 1 in Geneva from May 9th to 12th at Independents' Day, a non-selling exhibition of independent watchmaking coinciding with the Phillips Geneva Watch Auction: Nine at the H?tel La Rserve. The example that Smith is showing will be sold in the near future by his very first collector. ...

In the spring of 1970, around the time I was born in Rockford, Illinois, a 17-year-old high school junior, Bill Storch, signed up for a scuba course 90 miles to the east. New Trier High School, on the shore of Lake Michigan in the Chicago suburb of Wilmette, offered a PADI diving class for interested students. The basics of safety, techniques, and gear were taught in the schools pool, while the open water portion was done in a cold and murky lake north of the state line in Wisconsin. PADI, the Professional Association of Diving Instructors, was founded only four years earlier in Chicago, and its courses would soon become the most popular way to learn what was then a burgeoning adventure spo...

The wait is over, and its finally that time of the week once again. Hunting high and low while listening to Hunting High And Low C has resulted in the discovery of some true top-quality watches this week, with a little something for everyone. For those that dwell below the surface, weve got you covered with the inclusion of two early dive watches from Enicar and Nivada Grenchen, each with their own admirable claims to fame. Watches intended for use on land havent been forgotten either, with picks like a unique ladies piece by LeCoultre and an Art Deco rectangular Longines. To round things out, theres a Ref. 1675 GMT-Master with military provenance a plenty, should airborne watches be m...

Maybe it's a symptom of spending well over half of my waking hours looking at, researching, and focusing on watches, but sometimes I want something on my wrist that's a little less I dont know, "watchy." I still want to know what time it is and I still want to enjoy gazing down at my wrist, but I just want, yeah, less. When I get that itch, there's only one thing to scratch it, and that's the Swatch Skin Classic. It's almost an anti-watch, daring anyone horologically inclined to give me a hard time so I can launch into a polemic about why I think it's one of the best designed little products of all time.? My friend's well-worn Swatch Skin Classic. ...

A Bay Stater, a New Yorker, and a Californian walked into a bar C or, actually, the New York office of industrial designer George Nelson, one of the fathers of mid-century modern design. And, as was often the case in postwar offices, the beverages on offer that 1947 evening were as good as what you'd find at any bar. Soon Nelson, architect and futurist Buckminster Fuller (a good friend), industrial designer Irving Harper, and artist Isamu Noguchi were taking turns at the drawing table scribbling out potential wall clocks. These sketches were to fulfill a commission from the Howard Miller Clock Company. This company was originally an offshoot of the furniture comp...

Subscribe to the show: (Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, TuneIn). Already heard it once or twice? Please leave a short review here, and tell us which guests we should have on! This week's episode of HODINKEE Radio represents one of the cooler hours of my journalistic career. Early last Thursday morning, I hopped into an Uber, drove through a nearly-empty New York City, and boarded a flight to Orlando, Florida. My ultimate destination? The Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral.?Omega was hosting three days of programming to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing, and James was already down there to cover it for ...

Subscribe to the show: (Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify, TuneIn). Already heard it once or twice? Please leave a short review here, and tell us which guests we should have on! I love people who get obsessed with things. You can tell so much about who someone is and what makes them tick by the things that they just cant get out of their heads. Mark Cho is the co-owner and co-proprietor of classic menswear Mecca The Armoury and the London-based haberdasher Drake's. Hes a tough man to track down though, splitting his time between Hong Kong, London, New York, and Japan. But from the beginning we always knew he was going to end up on HO...

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