6805-2100

For the first time in its history, H. Moser & Cie. is venturing into the world of ceramics, opting for this technically demanding material to enhance the flowing lines of its most iconic collection: Streamliner. The cushion case and integrated bracelet are crafted from anthracite grey ceramic with alternating polished and satin-finished surfaces. With neither indices nor logo, the Red fumé Grand Feu enamel dial illuminates this crisp architecture, while the flying tourbillon with double hairspring injects dynamism. With the Streamliner Tourbillon Concept Ceramic model, the Schaffhausen-based Manufacture underscores its commitment to watchmaking that is forward-looking, precise, masterful and resolutely timeless.

6203-1200

There are stories that unfold in crescendo. The Genesis trilogy is one of them. In 2022, H. Moser & Cie. broke new ground in the world of watchmaking with a radical project blending the physical, the digital, and the virtual: the Endeavour Centre Seconds Genesis, a timepiece at the crossroads of traditional horology and Web3. It was more a declaration of intent than a mere product.

Today, with the Streamliner Genesis 2, the Manufacture takes another path, the path of reality. Raw. Absolute. It trades speed for substance, rooting its vision in matter itself. The Streamliner Genesis 2 is not an echo; it is a breath. A pivotal piece, set between the first spark and the conclusion yet to come.

1800-2004

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.

1814-0400

At H. Moser & Cie., minimalism is not a style so much as a philosophy. It’s all about removing in the name of revealing; about eliminating all superfluous material to lay bare the stark beauty of the mechanism. It is the brand’s signature. And with the Endeavour Tourbillon Skeleton model, Moser has pushed the concept to its limit: a fully skeletonised watch designed to retain only the essentials. Exposed, time beats to the rhythm of the one-minute flying tourbillon with a double hairspring, which appears to float weightlessly. An authentic style statement, the Endeavour Skeleton Tourbillon is the embodiment of elegance in its 40mm diameter 5N red gold case.

PAM01631

The Luminor 31 Giorni PAM01631 is a landmark milestone in Panerai’s pursuit of extended autonomy. For the first time, the Maison introduces a watch capable of running for an entire month on a single wind, pushing beyond the limits once defined by its celebrated 8 Giorni and later 10 Giorni movements. This continues a legacy shaped by Panerai’s early instruments developed for the Italian Navy, where reliability and long-lasting performance were essential during missions. A pillar that finds its most advanced expression through the work of Panerai’s Laboratorio di Idee, where seven years of research and development resulted in the new P.2031/S hand-wound skeleton calibre with an unprecedented power reserve length enclosed within a 44 mm Goldtech™ Luminor case.

PAM01629

Luminor PAM01629 carries Panerai’s heritage forward through a new chapter in material research. For the first time in its history, the Maison introduces forged titanium, advancing a material that has long defined its technical exploration. Panerai’s journey with titanium began in 1985 with the Mille Metri prototype, later entering the collection in 1998. Today, that legacy evolves with Forged Titanium, paired with design codes that shaped the earliest Luminor watches created for the Italian Navy in its most faithful interpretation. Today, through the innovative research of the Laboratorio di Idee, these historic features are reinterpreted, returning with the elevated performance afforded by an advanced material.

PAM01735

Luminor PAM01735 revisits the design codes that shaped the earliest Luminor watches created for the Italian Navy in its most faithful interpretation thanks to the 47mm case with a distinctive tropical dial. Drawing inspiration from the 1960s reference 6152/1, its 47 mm steel case, domed crystal and sandwich dial echo the functional solutions developed for underwater missions, where visibility and reliability were paramount. The “tropical dial” is inspired by vintage Panerai pieces whose black dials gradually shifted to warm tones after years of sunlight and use. A watch conceived as a robust instrument, defined by all the elements that makes Luminor the recognizable icon it is today.

PAM01733

The Luminor 8 Giorni PAM01733 masterfully encapsulates Panerai’s iconic 1960s design language within a robust 44mm case, distinguished by its unique Brunito finish. At its core, an impressive eight-day power reserve pays homage to the Angelus Calibre SF240 from the mid-1950s, which originally provided extended autonomy crucial for missions. PAM01733 continues this legacy: a manual calibre that, once fully wound at the start of the week, can run until the following week without intervention, echoing the operational logic of the historic instruments while responding to contemporary use.

PAM01731

Luminor PAM01731 pays tribute to the design language established by Panerai in the 1960s, when the Maison created professional instruments for the Italian Navy. Its defining elements—the robust cushion case, crown protective bridge, luminous numerals and sandwich dial – reflect a functional approach shaped by demanding underwater missions. Built for reliability, the watch combines strong water resistance, high legibility and a hand-wound calibre with extended power reserve. Reinterpreting the historic 6152/1 case architecture in a 44 mm format, PAM01731 carries forward the technical principles that originally defined Panerai’s tool watches.