Honestly I think most of us can get buy with time only or a time/date watch. Yet so many of us buy complicted watches, I am referring to the general watch buying public here. I personally don't want a complicated watch, my eyes can't see the dial anyway. ...
That's why I bought my FF Bathyscaphe. Simple, tells the time frighteningly accurately, has just the date (which I need in my line of work), and is robust enough to do the activities I do in life. It's also luxurious enough; great finishing and very nice ...
It can serve a purpose - time, home time, elapsed time and (except for Nico) date, etc It can remind you of something intrinsic about the solar system - moonphase, equation of time, etc The innovation, technology and craftsmanship can impress and delight ...
In the independent world time only watches, albeit it more “complicated” time only watches and those finished at a higher level, seem to have dominated the market over the last several years. Perhaps for those for whom complications on dials no longer mak...
WIS seem to live through a period of interest in the most complicated watches possible. During that phase, I bought a rattrapante (GP 9012, which was very nice). I actually bought that reference twice! But I ended up selling it as it was totally useless o...
I don't like that complications add significantly to the risk of service being required. More parts=exponentially higher chance of problems! With that said: -Chronographs because of how beautiful manual wind chronos can be. I love what they do to a moveme...
But I’ve always thought a moonphase would be cool to have. I think the complication is a cool, alternative, middle-of-the-road in a temporal sense, way of marking time. And that’s what watches are for, no? Plus they look cool!
A more practical complication is GMT, with icing on top, it will be GMT + Alarm. Technically more complicated movement for me is a chronograph. Tourbillon is not that complicated but the watch in your message is like a high end Swiss Army knife, good to h...
For me this isn’t the right question. I need nothing in a watch. I know the time. To me the question is, what do I enjoy in a watch? No easy answer here. I do enjoy the notion of eternity from a perpetual calendar. I love to play around on my chronograph....
the watch has to tell time fairly accurately. The aesthetics of the dial and case is important.....the rest is icing on the cake However,i think a chronograph and world time function would be useful and practical,for me.
I used to really need a date on a watch. But now, I find dates aren't always beautiful. So I often times avoid them nowadays for a more symmetrical look. Thus, I'm constantly buying Time Only watches! Perpetual calendars? No thank you - I find that they o...
I very much prefer “complicated” watches – I only own/owned a handful of time only/time with date watches (out of >80) in my 20+ years in this hobby. The craftsmanship that goes into a complicated mechanical timepiece, with several hundreds of small mecha...