World

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Beneath the Dial

Under the Dial

If you’re going to call yourself a watch lover—whether you’re an everyday wearer or a seasoned collector—it makes sense to know what you’re looking at. Not just the name on the dial or how many metres it claims to resist water, but what’s happening beneath the surface. Because the truth …

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Railroads and Timezones

It’s odd to think that there was ever a time when noon didn’t mean the same thing everywhere. Back before trains, when the fastest thing on land was a galloping horse and towns were content to march to the beat of their sundial, local time ruled. If it was noon …

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Hidden Dangers of Steam

Water Damaged Watch

This ones for the everyday watch-wearer, the collector, the mechanic, the diver, the enthusiast… and yes, even the know-it-alls among us. No slight meant to anyone involved in a recent post about steam, but let’s be honest—it gets a bit worrying when the facts around vapour and watches get tangled …

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Peter Speake – The Watchmaker Who Chose His Path

There are people in watchmaking who seem to follow a trail. Others pave new ones, and then there’s Peter Speake—someone who didn’t just change direction but changed shape, reinventing his presence in the horological world without ever abandoning the essence of why he started: a quiet, unflinching devotion to watchmaking. …

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The Telling of Time – Part 1

Telling Time by the Stars

Before we built instruments, before wheels turned or springs were coiled, time was written above us—in moonlight, in star patterns, in the angle of the sun as it dragged shadows across the earth. Our earliest ancestors weren’t keeping time because they needed a sense of time. They were trying to …

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Case-Backs – The hidden history!

For all the attention lavished on the front of a watch—the dial, the hands, the indices, the complications—there’s a quiet, often overlooked component that carries both the burden and the soul of the timepiece. The caseback, that unassuming surface pressed against the wrist, holds the final word in engineering, the …

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The Artistry of Hajime Asaoka

Hajime Asaoka

There are watchmakers, and then there are those rare visionaries who redefine what the craft can be. Asaoka is one of the latter. A self-taught Japanese master who rose entirely outside the Swiss ecosystem, Asaoka has not only proven that independent horology can thrive in Japan—he’s carved out a category …

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Electric Clocks – The Quiet Hum of Time

Smiths Electric Clock

There are moments in horological history where progress doesn’t arrive in a flourish of invention or artistry, but in something altogether quieter. The rise of electric clocks—specifically the synchronous type—is one of those stories. No dazzling complications, no sapphire casebacks, and no Geneva stripes. Just practicality, reliability, and a low, …

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How to Remove Vapour from a Watch

How to remove vapour from your watch

There are a few things more disheartening for a watch owner than spotting fog under the crystal. Whether it appears as a slight mist, a fine dew, or full droplets forming like sweat inside the dial, moisture ingress is a problem that shouldn’t be ignored. And while some forms of …

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F.P. Journe: “Invenit et Fecit”

If you’ve spent any time exploring the upper reaches of independent watchmaking, then the name F.P. Journe will already echo with reverence. And if it doesn’t, it should. In a world filled with homage, heritage, and a fair few hollow gestures, François-Paul Journe stands among the very few who didn’t …

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