Kev Green
August 31, 2024 Technology, Watches, Watchmakers
269
There’s a peculiar sort of magic in the world of watchmaking—a craft so often reduced to precision parts and silent mechanisms, yet alive with stories, personalities, and the patience only a human can possess. As I sit down to reflect on Peter Speake and the ripple he’s made in this …
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Kev Green
August 24, 2024 History, History of Watches, Technology
136
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 …
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kevgreen90@gmail.com
July 24, 2024 Business, Community, Watches
82
I remember when the rhythm of collecting watches was defined by silence. It wasn’t silence in the literal sense—you could always hear the tick of a balance wheel, the click of a crown winding—but silence in the social sense. Collecting was, more often than not, a solitary pursuit. You could …
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kevgreen90@gmail.com
June 26, 2024 Technology, Watch Accessories, Watches
328
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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kevgreen90@gmail.com
June 23, 2024 Brands, Watch Brands, Watchmakers
598
Dubois et fils is a name that carries with it a quiet gravitas, one of those historic Swiss watchmaking houses whose significance is less about marketing flash and more about the enduring resonance of centuries of craftsmanship. The company’s origins trace back to 1785, a year that situates it firmly …
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kevgreen90@gmail.com
June 12, 2024 Horologists, Technology, Watchmakers
56
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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kevgreen90@gmail.com
May 31, 2024 History, History of Watches, Technology, Watches
140
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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kevgreen90@gmail.com
May 24, 2024 Brands, History, History of Watches, Watch Brands
206
Hamilton has always been one of those brands that quietly stirs something in me. Not in the way that haute horology does, nor with the thunderous appeal of tool watch icons, but with a sort of affectionate curiosity. There’s a legacy there. A real one. And while I admire its …
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kevgreen90@gmail.com
May 1, 2024 Horologists, Technology, Watches, Watchmakers
479
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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kevgreen90@gmail.com
January 30, 2024 History
607
One of the things I love most about horology is how it tells stories that history books often overlook. Stories that begin not in Switzerland or Germany, but in places like Istanbul, once the beating heart of an empire that spanned continents and centuries. The Ottoman Empire might not be …
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