Tick Drop – Watch everything
While everyone was watching Rolex skip the Coke and Audemars Piguet bring a peacock – a group of overlooked brands quietly delivered some of the most extraordinary watches of the week. Almost nobody noticed. H. Moser & Cie. replaced the crown with a Reebok Pump button. Press it to wind the watch. Each press adds an hour of power reserve. The case is forged quartz fibre – no two look identical. It comes with matching Reebok sneakers in the box. $39,900. This is the same brand that made a watch from Swiss cheese to protest the Swiss Made label. Moser has always been watchmaking's great provocateur – and the Pump is their most outrageous move yet. Parmigiani celebrated their 30th anniversary with a world first. At rest – a perfect three-hand watch. Press the pusher. Five hands unfold across the entire dial simultaneously. The chronograph appears from nowhere. Press again to stop. Third press – every hand realigns and vanishes. 362 components. Four years of development. The philosophy of the invisible complication. Tudor marked 100 years with the Monarch – a forgotten model name revived with a faceted case unlike anything in their current collection, California dial, and the best movement finishing Tudor has ever shown. COSC and METAS certified. $5,875. IWC built a watch from scratch for human spaceflight. No crown. All functions via bezel. Certified for Haven-1 – the world's first commercial space station. Built for astronauts in pressurized gloves. And A. Lange & Söhne brought the most refined watch nobody talked about – 36mm, 9.8mm thin, annual calendar, moonphase accurate to one day in 122.6 years. The dark horses won Geneva. Find the full episode at tick-drop.com [http://tick-drop.com] – Watch everything.
14 episodes
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