Revolution
Results for Only Watch
21,692 articles · 219 videos found · page 197 of 731
Revolution
Time+Tide
Formex unviels the Aria, the brand’s most ambitious watch yet, featuring its first exclusive manufacture micro-rotor movement
Formex takes its innovations to the next level, introducing an exclusive manufacture micro-rotor movement in an ultra-thin titanium case
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Titanium Dive Watch Showdown: Halios Seaforth IV vs Tudor Pelagos FXD
We reviewed both the Halios Seaforth IV and Tudor Pelagos FXD to compare comfort, design, value, and long-term appeal between these two titanium dive watches.
Teddy Baldassarre
Alpina Startimer Pilot Automatic Review: A Cleaner, Leaner Aviation Watch
Alpina Startimer Pilot Automatic goes leaner, cleaner, and more wearable than ever in the collection's latest revamp.
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Serica’s Latest Release Brings Vintage Military Watch Sizing Back in a Big Way
Serica's new Ref. 7505 brings its field chronometer down to 35mm with COSC certification and 200m water resistance. Priced from $1,291.
Deployant
New: G-SHOCK Collaboration Watch to Celebrate Coca-Cola®’s 140th Anniversary
Casio continues to expand the cultural reach of G‑SHOCK with a new collaboration with Coca-Cola for a very interesting new fresh look..
Time+Tide
The Chanel Monsieur Lion Tourbillon Black Edition is anything but a “fashion watch”
The Chanel Monsieur Lion Tourbillon Black Edition proves dismissing watchmaking from "fashion houses" is a form of reckless ignorance.
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Longines Just Brought Back the Dive Watch That Started Its Vintage Revival
Longines revives the Longines Legend Diver 59 at 42mm. Here's what the reissue gets right and what questions it raises.
Monochrome
Introducing – The Watch Angels x Alpina Startimer Pilot IFR Chronograph, a Proper Pilot’s Instrument
Pilot watches have always occupied a special place in watchmaking and in our hearts. Large crowns, legible dials, chronographs, GMT indications, and slide-rule bezels all emerged from real-life needs. Yet despite many decades of looking up to aviation for clues, very few modern pilot watches can actually assist pilots in flight procedures. Most are stylistic […]
Worn & Wound
A New Kind of Bond Watch: Introducing the Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph 007 First Light
As I write this article in late May 2026, Bond fans want nothing more than news on the next film in the James Bond franchise. We know it’s going to be directed by Denis Villeneuve, but little else has been announced or decided upon. Namely, we don’t know who is going to play 007 as Daniel Craig has apparently given up his license to kill. So on the spectrum of “new Bond stuff” that fans might be interested in, I’m not sure how many waves the release of a 44mm Omega Chronograph with ties to a new Bond videogame is really going to make, but here we are. The Seamaster Diver 300M Chronograph 007 First Light is being pitched as a real life version of the watch the James Bond character uses in the upcoming First Light videogame, which is to be released across multiple platforms next week. First Light is a reimagining of the James Bond origin story, and follows a young Bond through the early days of his career with MI6. The watch in the game is, according to Omega, a tool that appears across several missions, and, in the game, is capable of disturbing electronic equipment and emitting a laser from its strap. Alas, the real thing doesn’t have complications nearly this unique. It’s modeled visually off of the watch that appears in the game, which incorporates subdials that the player accesses to, I guess, fire lasers from the strap, or something of that nature. So naturally a chronograph was the opportune choice for a watch tie in, and this represents the first ti...
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Seiko Samurai vs. Seiko Turtle: Hands-On Affordable Dive Watch Comparison
We reviewed both the Seiko Samurai and Seiko Turtle to compare comfort, design, value, and long-term appeal between these two affordable dive watches.
Time+Tide
The Omega Seamaster Chronograph worn in the video game 007 First Light is now a real watch
The first-ever chronograph in James Bond and Omega's history, this is the new Seamaster 300M Diver Chronograph 007 First Light.
The Watch Industry Has a Problem | Watches & Wonders 2026 Recap
Monochrome
First Look – The Maen Hudson 38 GMT MKII, A Compact Traveller’s Watch with Vintage Flair
Over the past few years, Stockholm-based brand Maen has delivered thoughtfully designed watches with strong selling points. Models such as the integrated-bracelet Manhattan Ultra-Thin and the recent Grand Tonneau Ultra-Thin have shown the brand’s growing confidence beyond its early vintage-inspired sports watches. Still, collections like the Hudson remain central to Maen’s identity, offering compact proportions, […]
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Synchron’s New Titanium Dive Watch Weighs Just 50 Grams
Synchron announces the Ti300M Poseidon Limited Edition. Grade 5 titanium, 50 grams, La Joux-Perret G100 movement, and a $990 pre-order price.
Time+Tide
Trafford Watch Co. unveils three colourful rectangular duos of its most refined Crossroads yet
Trafford's Crossroads receives a significant upgrade, alongside an array of colourful dials across two highly wearable sizes
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Tudor Pelagos FXD Review: A Modern Military Dive Watch That Earns the Hype
A week with the Tudor Pelagos FXD Marine Nationale revealed why this modern military diver has become one of Tudor’s most respected tool watches.
Time+Tide
Kevin O’Leary vs. Andrew McUtchen: $10,000 watch buying challenge at Time+Tide NYC
What happens when Kevin O'Leary walks into the Time+Tide NYC Discovery Studio with $10K and an opinion about everything?
Time+Tide
Raymond Weil CEO Elie Bernheim reflects on 50 years of the brand and the watch he created for the milestone
We sat down with the Raymond Weil CEO to discover how to properly celebrate a brand turning 50, among other things.
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Marathon’s New Military Watch Celebrates America’s 250th With a Blacked-Out Automatic
The Marathon Navigator U.S. 250 pairs a Sellita automatic movement with an ion-plated stainless steel case and patriotic details throughout.
Monochrome
First Look – The Orient Star M34 F8 Skeleton Hand Winding, a Dark, Compact Openworked Watch
Skeleton watches are clearly a big part of Orient Star. Between the sporty Avant-Garde Skeleton, the more refined Orient Star Skeleton in the brand’s Contemporary Collection, and now this new Orient Star M34 F8 Skeleton Hand Winding created for the brand’s 75th anniversary, the Japanese brand has built a broad range of openworked watches over […]
Revolution
Why the Pocket Watch could be the Biggest Trend of 2026
Two Broke Watch Snobs
TAG Heuer Built a Solar Quartz Watch for Indy 500 Diehards
The new TAG Heuer Formula 1 Solargraph x Indy 500 skips the loud racing palette for something quieter. Limited to 1,110 pieces at $2,250.
Hodinkee
Photo Report: Watch Spotting And Highlights From The Vancouver Timepiece Show
Held on the mountainous slope of Vancouver's North Shore, the Vancouver Timepiece Show offered its second-ever installment this past April. The event offers a true enthusiast-driven platform for a variety of value-driven brands and is part of a now three-show-strong portfolio for Canada's Timepiece Shows, spanning Vancouver, Toronto, and, later this month, Montreal for the first-ever appearance. Less than a week after the big show in Geneva ended, I hopped on a plane and flew to Vancouver for a very different type of watch show. Held in a bright and airy space in The Shipyards of North Van, the Vancouver show evolved this year, with fewer brands showing but attendance up by about 20%, to roughly 3,000 people over the weekend. A smaller, more casual show than the Toronto event held in September, the Vancouver Timepiece Show reflects the local watch scene while attracting brands and attendees from a much wider range. Scroll on for highlights from the brands at the show and a good handful of local watch-spotting. A pastel Halios Seaforth with the 12-hour bezel. Very Vancouver. Some Marathon wares glowing under UV light. The newly released Marathon CeraShell Navigator evolves a 40-year-old classic with a new case material that offers improved bezel performance, conventional springbars (vs. fixed), and a lighter weight on the wrist. Micromilspec continues to impress with versions of their multi-talented Milgraph, seen here as a special 75-piece version called "Proj...
Hodinkee
Watch It: Rolex Releases A Film Celebrating 100 Years Of The Oyster
How do you capture 100 years of the Oyster? That's the question at the center of Rolex's new 23-minute film celebrating the anniversary of one of the most important watches ever made. The film opens with incredible archival footage of Mercedes Gleitze swimming across the English Channel, then moves on to archival footage of many defining moments tied to the Oyster's history—speed records, Everest expeditions, deep-sea exploration, and much more. Most will know these stories, but seeing them presented together really captures the full breadth of what the Oyster has represented over the last century. One of the film's most impressive qualities is its sense of scale. Even something like the Daytona—one of the most iconic watches ever made and a subject that could easily support an entire film on its own—is only one small part of the larger story being told here. More than anything, it underscores just how broad and far-reaching Rolex's history with the Oyster really is. From there, the film transitions into the modern era, highlighting Rolex's ongoing ties to sport, the arts, and scientific exploration. It closes with a look at the brand's Perpetual Planet initiative and Rolex's environmental efforts, both in the field and within its own manufacturing operations, including a closer look at how the company is approaching sustainability in watchmaking. There are also a few fun details throughout. At one point, the film references precision down to "a fraction of a billi...
Worn & Wound
Finding the Right Snoopy Watch
One of my most vivid childhood memories is sitting on my grandmother’s lap reading the comics, or “funnies,” as we called them. I grew up in Atlanta, but both of my parents are from Kansas City, and all our extended family remains there. We took at least two trips back each year for as long as I could remember: one over summer vacation and then every Christmas. Each morning during those stays, I would run from my bed in mom’s childhood room to the “new room,” a small sunroom my grandparents added to the modest 1950s ranch home. Here, my grandmother had what I consider to be the most quintessential grandmother’s chair: oversized, plush, pink, floral, spacious for one, and the perfect fit for her and me to cuddle up – it was made for us. On a small ottoman nearby, the day’s Kansas City Star would be neatly folded until I b-lined toward the paper, tossing away the superfluous sections until I extracted the comics from the bunch. We had several favorites, but the one that rose above the rest was undeniably Peanuts. I couldn’t tell you the last time I picked up a physical newspaper or read the “funnies” like we used to do. As I grew older, and went off to college, my grandmother would mail me clips, and I’ve since framed some of those and tucked them around my New York City apartment. Today, I perpetuate this memory in a way my grandmother would never understand or consider a comparable replacement for the comics section – I follow an Instagram accou...
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Best Affordable Field Watch Alternatives to the Hamilton Khaki Field
See hand-on reviewed picks that bring military-inspired design, solar convenience, mechanical charm, and everyday durability beyond the usual Hamilton default.
Monochrome
First Look – Baltic and SpaceOne Team Up to Present the Brilliant Seconde Majeure Watch
Some of the best creations often result from the least expected encounters… However, when two radically different creative minds start to work together, nothing says that the alchemy will develop. More often than not, the connection doesn’t come to fruition. At first, there was seemingly no reason for entities like Baltic and SpaceOne to collaborate. […]
Two Broke Watch Snobs
The Affordable New Timex Navi Snoopy Soccer Is the First Peanuts Watch I’d Actually Wear
The new Timex Navi Snoopy Soccer brings Peanuts to Timex's sportier 41mm case. An honest look at the affordable collab, its blue sunray dial, and its trade-offs.
Teddy Baldassarre Videos
Everything To Know Before Buying A Pilot Watch - The Ultimate Guide
Today our very own Director of Editorial Content, Mark Bernardo, presents the ultimate guide to pilot's watches. Beginning with the early days of aviation and spanning through space exploration, pilot's watches have a long and storied history as being crucial tools of the profession.