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Making good art is hard. Doing so while performing a never-ending calculus of risk mitigation for a crew and an expeditionary team on the top of a mountain is substantially harder. Photo credit, Tristan Greszko But for Jimmy Chin, the award-winning director of Free Solo and Meru, his career as a filmmaker-adventurer has meant being an active participant in high-altitude Himilayan climbing expeditions and sleeping in a tent nailed to a vertical cliff hundreds of feet in the air, all while working. He doesn't just watch from afar, he takes his turn and leads the pitch, as he did when Renan Ozturk, Conrad Anker, and he eventually...

Alain Silberstein is one of watchmaking's most recognizable creative talents. With his trademark ability to play with primary colors and geometric shapes, and Bauhaus-design influences, it's impossible to misidentify his work. After closing his eponymous firm in 2012, Silberstein's collaborated with MB&F, Romain Jerome, and more recently (and recurrently)?Louis Erard. A few months ago, Silberstein announced his latest partnership with Philippe Lebru, an award-winning clockmaker from Silberstein's home C?and the capital of French horology C?Besan?on. Lebru's firm, UTINAM,?has become the world leader in the production of these clock...

Last year, towards the end of August 2020, I published a Week On The Wrist story about the Seiko Prospex SPB143. On paper, the SPB143 looked like an ideal blend of features, proportion, and price that offered a distinct step up from an SKX007 or an SRP777 without going deeper into the four-figure range for something like an SLA017. And in the metal, it delivered. As I remain entirely enamored with this Seiko C Ive been wearing it almost constantly over the past year, and both talking about it on my podcast and posting images of it on Instagram C I thought Id take a few minutes to share my long-term feelings about the watch and address some of the most common qu...

The first thing to know about anOrdain is that they're based in Glasgow, Scotland. The second is that they have mastered the techniques behind making 'grand feu' dials, also called vitreous enamel dials. It's not an easy technique to get right, and in a few short years since the brand's founding in 2015, anOrdain (named for a Scottish loch) has become synonymous with vitreous enamel dials. The brand has honed in on this arcane dial-making art and perfected it to the same level of execution that's usually only found in the high houses of horology. Because of the nature of the process, a glassy substance that's fused to metal through very high temperatures C the di...

Welcome to the second installment of Hey, HODINKEE! C where you, our readers and community members, ask questions about anything and everything watch-related. We've got three great questions in the lineup this week. First, a reader asks a question near and dear to our hearts: why do we sometimes say "movement," but other times, "caliber," and what's the difference? (If you're interested in finding out how the very martial-sounding word "caliber" got to be used as a term for a watch movement, check out Jack Forster's article on that very question, from 2017). Another reader asks for advice on picking a real "heirloom" watch in the relatively wallet-friendly range ...

The year is 2019 and I'm on my third trip to Japan, and my second to charming Kyoto, which strikes me as the polar opposite of relentless, breakneck modern Tokyo. Kyoto, the country's former capital, slows things down C way down C with its Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, Kaiseki restaurants, and coffee shops. One afternoon for lunch, I find my way into a place called Inoda Coffee and take my seat. And I notice something on the wall: A clock with a stubby pendulum swinging at what appears to be warp speed. The wall clock at Kyoto's Inoda Coffee, founded in 1940. Though the time was past 12 and I was eating lunch, it looks l...

Trundling up the freshly asphalted drive of Bremonts new watchmaking facility just outside the English town of Henley earlier this summer, it wouldnt be over-egging it to say I felt something close to wonder, a rarer occurrence these days than it once was. A sort of By Jove, theyve done it! sense of elation. And with it a vicarious feeling of pride. I should explain.Getting on 15 years ago, I went to the launch of one of Bremonts first-ever watches at a long-since defunct jewellers in Mayfair. It was a small affair attended by the few UK writers who were covering the watch industry in those days, and no doubt a fair number of the founders friends and famil...

Two months ago, Danny highlighted the watches worn by Roy Scheider and Richard Dreyfuss in 1975's all-time classic summer blockbuster, Jaws. As my esteemed colleague rightfully pointed out in his Watching Movies piece, the watch on Dreyfuss' wrist was subject to debate for a number of years until it was correctly identified as a little-known, inside-baseball diver from a small Swiss company called Alsta. The original version of the Alsta company shuttered just a few years later, and any knowledge of the brand's catalog along with it. In fact, if it was not for internet movie/watch detectives identifying the Alsta Nautoscaph on th...

When I was a kid, one of my mothers close friends had a Cartier Tank with a black lizard strap. I can picture it on her wrist now, its gold edges gleaming beneath the turned-back cuff of a spotless camel cashmere cardigan. She was from Atlanta, a world away from us in Massachusetts, and her nails were always beautifully manicured. She wore actual eye makeup; I never saw her without it. My mother was an attractive and reasonably fashionable person, but she did her nails herself in front of 60 Minutes, never wore anything but lipstick, and would have died before spending money on a manicure or more than $50 on a watch. I have therefore always associated Cartier Ta...

Hey, yall. Its been awhile. Regular readers of this website may have wondered where Ive been since I vanished, apparently in a puff of smoke, back in March with only cryptic hints as to what Ive been doing with my life. What Ive been doing is starting a company thats been in the works since I was a toddler. And today, Im ecstatic to reveal all the details here on HODINKEE, the place that taught me enough about watches that I felt confident to launch my own brand.?Its called Parchie. Its for kids. And today is its very first day in business! ...

Over on the other side of HODINKEE, aka, Crown & Caliber, you will find a well-loved YouTube personality named Mark Hackman. When Mark isnt talking through Hidden Gems on YouTube he is the buyer over at C&C, living the dream and selecting top-of-the line inventory. We caught up with Mark to see how he got into the business and what watch hes still got his eye on. Cole Pennington: Where did your interest in watches start? Tell me about the moment that got you hooked. Mark Hackman: I have worn a watch since I was a kid and begged my dad to buy me a Freestyle Shark from Ron Jon Surf Shop. My dad always wore a G-Shock and growing u...

Around the same time James picked up a Seiko SPB143 for himself over a year ago, I picked up a Seiko SPB153. It's easier to decode the Voynich Manuscripts than it is to understand Seiko's confusing reference numbers, so I'll make the nomenclature easy. The SPB143 is a modern derivative of the 62MAS, Seiko's first dive watch. The SPB153 (and the SPB151 C the black dialed variant) are modern versions of Seiko's well-known 6105-8110. You've most likely heard the 6105 referred to as the "Captain Willard" because it was worn by Martin Sheen as Captain Willard in Apocalypse Now. From the second I wrote up the Introducing post on this w...

What We Love Bovet is a watchmaker straight out of a Swiss fairytale. Independent, the company is based out of a literal castle C?Le Chateau de M?tiers C?that once belonged to the original Bovet family and overlooks the small town of M?tiers in Neuchatel. The watches produced by the firm since its rebirth in the late 1990s are a fascinating combination of artisanal handcraft and sophisticated old-world aesthetics that catch your eye from across the room. Bovet's watches are a rare breed among independents today for their exceptional quality and equally exceptional price tag. But they're still sorely underrated among most watch lovers, a f...

Apple Watch C these two words no doubt bring to mind the sleek, square-shaped smart device that effectively puts a computer on your wrist. It's a piece of technology that has fully permeated our modern lives. But the one Tim Cook debuted in 2014 (launched in 2015) wasn't the first Apple Watch. A little-known, largely forgotten relic of the World Wide Web era came a full decade earlier. To tell the story, we must hop in our time machine and jet back to the 1980s and '90s. Jobs, the Apple co-founder and prickly visionary, had been ousted from his own company after a prolonged battle over the original Macintosh. In the ensuing years, the company endured a certain le...

Pilot watches hold a place in the holy quartet of tool watches (along with dive, field, and chronographs). Not all pilot watches are the same though. Some are sized for the normal-wristed, while others are built for Bruce Banner when he's angry. What's great about a tool watch is that you find them at just about every price point. Today, we are looking at two conservatively sized, heritage-rich, cockpit-ready timepieces that sit on opposing ends of the pricing spectrum C though neither will break the bank. Let's give them a look. Steal The Watch: The Hamilton Pilot Pion...

To view the entire current selection of vintage watches available in the HODINKEE Shop, click here.?Questions? Send us a note, or let us know in the comments. Want to sell your vintage watch through the HODINKEE Shop? Click here. Want to sell your pre-owned watch through Crown & Caliber? Click here. This Week's Vintage Watches As the days get shorter, less sunlight has the chance to grace us with that perfect, golden sunlit moment with a watch. No matter if you catch it early in the morning, heading out for the day, right at noon while grabbing some lunch, or even on the way home in the evening, there is something special about th...

Swiss brand Norqain has just announced the latest addition to its Adventure lineup with the Neverest collection. Formed around three iterations of a sporty 40mm no-date dive watch, these are the first models in the Adventure series to feature Norqains higher-spec NN20/1 automatic movement. In keeping with the mountainous inspiration for the new line, a portion of the funds generated by Neverest collection sales will help to fund the Butterfly Help Project, which was founded to help support families of Sherpas who have died in the Himalayas and ensure that their children have access to education. All ...

If you get a chance to drop in on the Concours d Elegance at Pebble Beach, the annual pilgrimage for a certain kind of car enthusiast, you should go. Maybe for the cars, most of which are beautiful and often rare, but definitely for the scene. Its Coachella for the one percent. (Better manners, nicer port-a-potties ) A gold Rolex Daytona with green face, owned by Joseph Cassini III Pebble, as its usually called, is recognized worldwide as one of the most important and historic automotive shows in the world. But back in 1950, it was a last-minute addition to the first West Coast Road Races at Pebble Beach C added by the ...

Auto racing is a notoriously expensive sport and without the right partners and sponsorships, it's all but impossible to field a competitive team C even if you have a great driver behind the wheel. Looking back at 1971, this story from our pal Jeff Stein uncovers a similar scenario faced by Heuer when their latest crop of cutting-edge chronographs needed a jump-start and how an unlikely player C Viceroy Cigarettes C proved to be just the partner they needed to stay in the race. With the 2021 running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans currently underway, get behind the wheel of this detailed and historically minded post and take a trip ba...

The name Jasem Al Zeraei might not ring as loudly as some others we've had here on Talking Watches. But trust me when I tell you Jasem, and his Instagram alter ego, have played a huge role in the watch world over the past five years. He is the man behind @Patekaholic C one of the most followed watch accounts on the 'gram, and his unrelenting love for all things Patek Philippe has served as model for dozens of other brand-specific accounts. Jasem's approach to his pursuit of Patek and all that surrounds it is organic and earnest C providing those of us at home with the sharp details of Patek collecting we'd seldom hear of, and even challenging Patek HQ itself, from time to time.? ...

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