Jaeger-LeCoultre Atmos Infinite ‘Halo’
An ode to transparency and minimalism, the Atmos Infinite ‘Halo’ is a design of great purity yet remains true to the intrinsic identity of the Atmos. A 21st-century reinterpretation of the classical Art Deco “glass box” Atmos design, the smooth, cylindrical glass cabinet also recalls the rounded “bell jar” domes of the very earliest models. With its complete absence of visual distraction, the seamless glass cabinet gives full value to the remarkable Atmos mechanism, which appears to float freely within it. A temperature fluctuation of just one degree Celsius provides the clock with an operating autonomy of about two days, enabling it to run perpetually.
Mauron Musy MU06 Mayura
Initially designed to withstand the extreme demands of aerospace and motorsport, a high-performance coating, based on a carbon structure, finds a new purpose in avant-garde watchmaking. When metal comes into contact with the coating elements, it reacts, revealing a palette of unpredictable iridescent reflections, as if each watch possessed its own mineral fingerprint. A unique visual signature. At the heart of the 41mm MU06 Mayura beats the MM02 calibre, the brand’s first in-house micro-rotor movement.
Montblanc 1858 Geosphere Annual Calendar Limited Edition
The visual focal point of this 42mm timepiece, in Lime Gold or stainless steel, is the hand-painted, three-dimensional, rotating globe featuring the Northern Hemisphere and a Day & Night indication. The globe also indicates Greenwich Mean Time with an orange line and a 24-hour scale. Crafted from sapphire crystal, each globe is hand-painted on the underside by a Swiss artisan. Both versions are powered by a brand-new manually wound manufacture Minerva movement.
F.P.Journe Chronomètre Furtif
Now joining the lineSport Collection, the small production run of the Chronomètre Furtif has been designed by François-Paul Journe to have a 42mm case and bracelet made from tungsten carbide (interspersed with tantalum elements), an extremely hard material; it is double the density of steel and almost as dense as gold. The watch features a mirror-polished anthracite grey Grand Feu enamel on white gold dial, designed in the same spirit as the one adorning the unique piece sold at the Only Watch 2024 auction. Understated, accurate and time-resistant.
Fam Al Hut Mark 1 Möbius
Creating a buzz for their first participation at the Time to Watches show in Geneva, this emerging Chinese brand with an Arabic name presented “the most compact bi-axis tourbillon wristwatch ever created”, measuring 42.4mm long, 24.3mm wide and 12.9mm thick, with the tourbillon peaking at 17mm in a lugless design. Achieving this required the development of a capsule-shaped in-house movement – a micro-mechanical city of precisely stacked components offering a 50-hour power reserve.
Furlan Marri Red Hunter Anniversary Piece
To mark the fourth anniversary of Furlan Marri, founders Andrea Furlan and Hamad Al Marri introduce their first 36mm watch with a hinged caseback, the Red Hunter Anniversary Piece, a nod to historic hunter-case pocket watches and officer-style wristwatches. Opening the caseback via a discreet side notch reveals two details highlighting the anniversary: a special anniversary engraving and a sapphire crystal displaying a newly designed oscillating weight plated in rose gold. Powering this anniversary edition is the G100 automatic movement by La Joux-Perret.
Nomos Glashütte Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer
With its characteristic wide range of tones and colours, the German brand presents a watch that combines the robust elegance of Club Sport with a worldtime function for the first time. The two core 40mm versions in silver and blue are complemented by six special editions – each limited to 175 pieces – in colours that echo the beauty of the natural world. They are equipped with the Nomos calibre DUW 3202, which is particularly thin because it fully integrates the worldtime function into the movement.
Vacheron Constantin Les Cabinotiers Solaria Ultra Grand Complication – La Première
The quest for the highest number of complications is relaunched by Vacheron Constantin – this time for a record wristwatch at the occasion of its 250th anniversary. This masterpiece of innovation and miniaturisation boasts 41 watchmaking complications, among them five rare astronomical complications and an innovative Westminster minute repeater. With 1,521 components, the new manufacture Calibre 3655 is housed in a white gold case with a 45mm diameter and a height of just 14.99mm, which makes it unusually “wearable” for a watch that can display civil, solar and sidereal time simultaneously, with a gear train specific to each of them.
Tiffany & Co. Rope Watch
The twisted gold motif that defines the Rope jewellery collection, imagined by legendary designer Jean Schlumberger, has been translated into a timepiece that features Tiffany & Co.’s first solar-powered movement. In a 27mm or 33mm case, the watch is presented in 18k yellow gold with the option of a white mother-of-pearl or glossy black dial. The wide bezel surrounding the dial is highlighted by two circles of polished gold rope separated by a ring of round brilliant diamonds. This rope motif is repeated on the minute hand.