Czapek brings a frostbitten new reference to its Antarctique collection, its dial cut from a billion year old fragment of space and tinted in a denim blue drawn from polar light at dusk.
Zenith channels the architecture of Paris with a new Chronomaster Original, a chronograph whose verdigris dial echoes the copper rooftops and quiet symmetry that define the city.
For the first time in the Orbit's history, Armin Strom takes the midnight purple fumé dial deeper than the dial itself, bleeding the color through into the movement via a frosted midnight purple mainplate.
The moon has guided mariners, inspired myths and colored the imagination of every civilization that ever looked skyward. Arnold & Son captures three of its most striking faces with a world-first use of PVD-treated mother-of-pearl.
Jaeger-LeCoultre slims down its Polaris Date to a 40mm case and a trimmer 12.9mm profile, with the signature blue gradient lacquer dial, internal rotating bezel and manufacture Calibre 899 all present and accounted for.
In the late 1950s, Havana's Malecón waterfront became a racetrack for the Gran Premio de Cuba, an era Cuervo y Sobrinos revisits with a trilogy of chronographs inspired by the original race posters.
Pequignet introduces the Royale Paris Chrono, the brand's first in house chronograph, fully designed, developed and assembled at its Morteau workshops as a nod to the chronograph's own French roots.
In 1969, DOXA introduced the SUB 200 T.GRAPH at a moment when a chronograph on a professional dive watch was still an unusual idea. The SUB 200 T.GRAPH II picks up that thread with a tighter case, and a new Caribbean Blue joining the three original dial colors.
Forest green arrives on the Tangente neomatik 38 Update, letting two small red markers do the quiet work of tracking the date around the dial's outer ring, all in an ultra thin steel case.
BALL Watch Company enlists the world's most famous Flying Ace for its first Peanuts collaboration, a manual-winding tool watch with micro gas tube illumination and Snoopy in full aviator kit at 9 o'clock.
The Thermosphere takes one straightforward idea, that a watch worn on duty should work as hard as the person wearing it, and delivers a 42mm tool watch whose rotating bezel maps breathing apparatus time checkpoints for firefighters.
The UR-120 Blue Planet is the third and final iteration of one of URWERK's most celebrated models, and as three hour satellites orbit a central carousel, it closes out the trilogy with no small amount of swagger.
MB&F celebrates 20 years with one of its most ambitious concepts yet, a flying tourbillon wristwatch designed to read as a robotic face with a 38cm mechanical friend, making HM12 The Guardian a complete horological universe.
Angelus adds a technically ambitious new reference to its Instrument de Mesures collection, consolidating a telemeter, pulsometer and tachymeter within a three-dimensional 39 mm steel case.
Chronoswiss adds a glacially cool new reference to its Delphis collection, housing a retrograde minute and jumping hour in a 42mm Grade 5 titanium case with hand guilloched dial surfaces inspired by alpine ice.
Built around a fully in-house reverse-action movement with mirrored components, the Raketa Russian Code Meridian makes the case that counterclockwise is not a quirk but an astronomical correction.
Over 150 watch brands' new collections.
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