
URWERK’s UR-100V ‘Hunter Green’ isn’t just a new colorway—it’s a reimagining of how we perceive color itself. Green? Not quite. Grey? Almost. Under shifting light, this enigmatic hue flirts with ash-green, offering a refined, subtly metallic presence that feels unmistakably British in its restraint.
This full-titanium edition continues URWERK’s pursuit of technical minimalism, with every element—from the sculpted case to the seamlessly integrated bracelet—designed to highlight both the material’s inherent character and the unique chromatic depth of ‘Hunter Green.’ It remains unmistakably part of the UR-100V lineage, a collection that has always balanced visual purity with high-concept watchmaking.
Martin Frei, the creative force behind URWERK’s distinct design language, once again challenges convention, while Felix Baumgartner redefines how we read time. There are no traditional hands here. Instead, wandering satellite hours traverse a graduated arc to indicate the minutes, before handing over to the next hour in a beautifully orchestrated mechanical dance.
Beneath its avant-garde design lies a poetic tribute to astronomical timekeeping. Inspired by a 17th-century clock, the UR-100V’s twin indicators track Earth’s motion—one displaying the 555 kilometers we travel in 20 minutes as our planet spins, the other showing the 35,740 kilometers we cover in the same span as Earth orbits the Sun.
The UR-100V ‘Hunter Green’ is more than a timepiece; it’s a silent observer of celestial mechanics, a fusion of horology and space-time exploration.