pingtsai[PuristSPro Moderator]
2063
Yup Art, you're right about that :)
That's why it's so fascinating to talk about.
+1, Nico
By: ztirual : June 11th, 2014-11:03
The time spent researching, hunting and considering The passion shared (i am afraid not much here on PSP...) And mostly, as Nicolas so simply puts it, the watch in the collection, their beauty, their history, etc. No special preference for blondes, brunet...
This is a great question
By: docsnov : June 7th, 2014-23:11
and one to which for me the answer has changed over time. Fifteen years ago I bought my first "high end" watch, an entry level Rolex, because I loved the way it looked and it was a statement that I had arrived. I had just graduated from medical school, wa...
A few criteria for me
By: rnaden : June 8th, 2014-01:58
1. Design - looks, comfort and wearability - this is going to be on my wrist and I must like having it there 2. Cost - Obviously 3. Availability and ease of future servicing - would probably rank as high as cost, and this is where the movement is not as i...
All great reasons and some
By: pingtsai : June 8th, 2014-19:58
I didn't think about like #4. I hear this a lot. Sometimes people will pick one watch over another simply because they don't have something like it. #5, do you mean not flashy or do you mean an unknown brand? And #6, what kind of watch usually excites you...
All great reasons and some
By: pingtsai : June 10th, 2014-21:26
I didn't think about like #4. I hear this a lot. Sometimes people will pick one watch over another simply because they don't have something like it. #5, do you mean not flashy or do you mean an unknown brand? And #6, what kind of watch usually excites you...
Great question ...
By: nilomis : June 8th, 2014-03:18
Ping, It made me thing and I ended up discovering that I use a lot of negative logic: The brand don't make me ashamed to wear the watch The watch don't have lots of "bling" The brand is not popular among thieves (a serious concern here) No precious metal ...
I buy..
By: drphileasfogg : June 8th, 2014-04:43
I buy the watch itself; it has to speak to me and be understated (these days). Then the movement has to mechanical and the brand established long enough to offer proper service in the future (which explains why I don’t buy from the independents). I don’t ...
Hi Stan
By: pingtsai : June 9th, 2014-21:39
Thanks for sharing your values in watch buying. "It has to be understated" this is at the core of Purist values , among other things. The people factor is one of the most fascinating elements in horology. Thanks for pointing it out.
I usually ...
By: mycroft : June 8th, 2014-05:01
... Buy or acquire a timepiece through processes that go through my heart and my head or some combination of both. The percentage of either that weighs into the final decision varies with the watch and over time. So you can say that I am right and/or left...
If I see a part of me in it...
By: Echi : June 8th, 2014-20:50
It has to embody something that I hold important. It can be an ideal that I try to live up to, a state of mind that I am in or struggle to be in, an attribute that I find lacking in today's workplace that is standard in a piece, or a design aesthetic that...
First of all
By: Arie - Mr Orange : June 9th, 2014-17:55
the N# 1 reason: I need a watch just because I like them. Always have, always will. Why? No idea. It's an emotional primary thing which needs no reasoning. Now When the virus gets lethal (expensive) reasons do come in to play for me. - what model will fit...