The H. Moser & Cie. Perpetual Calendar is considered to be one of the most legible and easy to set on the market, as it can be adjusted both forwards and backwards at any time of day. With the Endeavour Perpetual Calendar Concept Tantalum model, the manufacture explores a new facet of tantalum, adopting this rare and exacting metal for the case but also for the dial, machined from solid and featuring a brushed sunburst pattern. No lacquer, no surface treatment, no artifice. A Perpetual Calendar reduced to the essentials, where raw metal and mechanical ingenuity speak for themselves, with only 50 pieces produced.
1909-0500
At H. Moser & Cie., we don’t hide our complications. They are meant to be seen and heard. With the Endeavour Minute Repeater Cylindrical Tourbillon Skeleton, the Schaffhausen-based Manufacture pushes this approach to its limit: a fully skeletonised minute repeater, with its mechanism in the foreground, paired with a flying tourbillon equipped with a cylindrical hairspring. Two pinnacles of traditional watchmaking brought together in a single piece with a resolutely contemporary architecture, housed in a 40 mm titanium case. Time as a spectacle.
5810G-001
5810/1G-001
Patek Philippe revisits the design of the Nautilus on the occasion of the collection’s 50th anniversary with this timepiece featuring an ultra-thin white gold case framing a sunburst blue dial bearing the iconic horizontally embossed pattern. This watch is powered by ultra-thin self-winding 240 caliber. It’s issued in a 2,000-piece limited edition.