Time+Tide
Serica’s latest COSC-certified Ref. 7505 field watch proves that 35mm is the new 36mm
Serica's latest Ref. 7505 Field Chronometer proves that size does matter after all, delivering tool watch functionality in a 35mm package
42,100 articles · 280 videos found · page 795 of 1413
Time+Tide
Serica's latest Ref. 7505 Field Chronometer proves that size does matter after all, delivering tool watch functionality in a 35mm package
Time+Tide
Awake refreshes its excellent Sơn Mài with a newly refined case, and a trio of incredibl, celestially-inspired guilloché dials
Revolution
Two Broke Watch Snobs
Choosing between a mechanical chronograph and a quartz chronograph? See which is smarter for daily wear, ownership costs, reset precision, and long-term value.
Deployant
Stanley caught up with Michel Nydegger in Geneva recently, and got him on video discussing two final editions released for 2026.
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Time+Tide
Chanel's J12 Superleggera returns, this time with a stealthy, matte black ceramic finish and a detail-packed, motorsport-inspired dial
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Time+Tide
French brand Depancel reveals its latest automotive-inspired 5-watch collection, blending retro styling with a reliable mechaquartz movement
Revolution
Time+Tide
In its debut year, Chronopolis showed us exactly what has been missing from a week dominated by Watches and Wonders.
Time+Tide
Farer just unveiled its new Pilot Collection Series II, combining classic aesthetics with modern pilot's watch details
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Monochrome
Reservoir was launched in 2017 and quickly became known as a watchmaking brand inspired by automotive gauges, aeronautical counters and industrial manometers. Reservoir built its identity around a simple yet visually interesting concept: displaying time through jumping hours and retrograde minutes, often with a power reserve indication. Until now, that instrument’s aesthetic influence has been […]
Worn & Wound
Playing on nostalgia is nothing new for watch brands, but I’ve mostly been immune to it. Usually it’s for a period of time I wasn’t alive for, or a war I didn’t fight in, or an old car I simply don’t care about. But I’ve come to accept that I’m at an age where nostalgia for me is actually real history for many. My lived experience of hanging up phones, buying CDs that came in cardboard long boxes, and killing time in malls doing nothing at all might seem as foreign to someone 20 years younger than me as getting all misty about the Pan-Am logo does for my friends and colleagues at the heart of Gen-X. It was inevitable that a luxury watch brand would reach back into my childhood and pull something out like the Reebok Pump. The fact that it’s H. Moser is not particularly surprising given the brand’s recent history of challenging somewhat stodgy conventions of what it means to be a “luxury” brand in the first place. But it does make me feel a little old to know that something I have such a clear memory of from my youth is fodder for the watch nostalgia marketing machine. For those who have forgotten or are simply too young to remember, the Pump was a line of basketball shoes introduced by Reebok in the early 90s with a particularly enticing gimmick, at least to impressionable children who waited all week to watch NBA Inside Stuff every Saturday morning: the shoe’s tongue was topped with a rubber basketball “pump.” Pushing it inflated an air pock...
Hodinkee
A sodalite dial Polo 79 anchors a broader return to semiprecious stone dials, drawing on Piaget's 1970s design language.
Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
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