Two Broke Watch Snobs
This Affordable Stone Dial Watch Proves You Don’t Need a Luxury Budget
An affordable stone dial watch that prioritizes design, wearability, and restraint over luxury hype-without a five-figure price tag.
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Two Broke Watch Snobs
An affordable stone dial watch that prioritizes design, wearability, and restraint over luxury hype-without a five-figure price tag.
Hodinkee
For a second outing following last year's LE, this luminous shark-themed collab gets a helping hand (it's a GMT).
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A 'behind-the-wheel' experience from the Audrain Newport Concours & Motor Week.
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Come for the cars, stay for the endless number of Lange wristshots.
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At Dubai Watch Week, Rolex CEO Jean-Frédéric Dufour reveals how much Rolex spends each year upgrading its machinery and why it has more than 500 apprenticeships.
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Revolution
Revolution
Revolution
Two Broke Watch Snobs
The Certina Action Diver 38mm gets subtle upgrades for 2025, including fresh materials and refined styling.
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All of tonight's winners from the watch world's biggest award show.
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Hodinkee
A handmade watch that pushes the boundaries of not just modern watchmaking but the history of watchmaking in general.
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Spike Lee, Gary Striewski, and a lot of great watches.
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Checking wrists with the Wrist Check Podcast, a special chat (and bottle) with Jhonel Faelnar, and many more great watches.
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Two new references - one in titanium, the other with a black luminous dial - prove Cartier's first pilot's watch still has a contemporary edge that resists nostalgia.
Monochrome
Ochs und Junior, the independent brand founded in 2006 around the inventive genius of Dr Ludwig Oechslin, has built its reputation on watches that present complex astronomical or calendar displays in radically simple, functional designs. Models such as the perpetual calendar, annual calendar, and moon phase are already cult favourites among collectors who appreciate mechanical […]
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The 20-piece limited edition is inspired by Vacheron Constantin's automaton clock masterpiece, also unveiled today, and combines the highest-end artistry with a brand-new complicated caliber.
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At three-and-a-half feet tall, 550 pounds, with 23 horological complications, 6,293 total components, two musical instruments, and an automaton, it is the centerpiece of a new exhibition at the Louvre.
Monochrome
Founded in Paris in 1785 by Charles Leroy, L.Leroy was once one of France’s illustrious watchmaking houses, known for its marine chronometers, high complications and commissions for European royalty. After years of dormancy, the brand, acquired in 2004 by Miguel Rodríguez of the Festina Group, is staging a comeback. Following its first step with a […]
Revolution
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The hype boom for vintage watches reached new peaks a few years ago, but even before that, a few watches had achieved outstanding, never-before-seen prices before disappearing into collections for over a decade. Some are so special that their market return could set a new bar.
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Hodinkee
A completely objective and totally not astrologically driven review of a high art watch from one of the world's oldest watch brands.
Revolution
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A hand-guilloché illustration of one of the zodiac signs, sapphires on the case, and one of Vacheron's best movements for a 12 piece limited series.
Worn & Wound
Last fall (2024), I felt the itch for something new-that hankering one gets when they just need a new watch. I usually resist, but this time, the fates had a different plan for me. You see, sitting on the forums was an unworn Ming 37.07 Monolith just looking for a good home. I had wanted a Ming for a while, but found myself never in the right place at the right time-or with the right amount of watch-budget when they were released. For a while, in those post-COVID bubble days, Ming’s watches sold out really fast. So, you were either ready at the moment… or not. So, when the 37.07 Monolith, my favorite of the brand’s most recent generation of watches (up until that point), unworn and slightly below retail, was available, I knew I had to go for it. Since its arrival, it has become one of my most frequently worn watches. Not just because it’s new, though that always is a factor, but because there is something wholly different about it from any other watch I’ve owned. It’s modern to the bone-sleek, mysterious, and compelling. The dial defies convention by appearing surfaceless and void-like, without printed or applied markers. It’s minimal yet legible, giving you just enough. And it’s surprisingly comfortable to wear, hugging the wrist with a generously domed profile. But why am I talking about this watch when this article is intended as a review for a different model, the 37.02 Ghost? While different models, they are both part of the 37-series, as are sev...
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This one is for you, Dad.
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