As for the Panerai that stayed with me… the ones that endured weren’t the rarest or the most complex, but the ones that marked the important moments.
My 124E has been with me since my early twenties — it was my first Panerai, my first mechanical watch, and it has seen more of my life than almost anything else in the box.
And the 312L came a few years later, the first ‘his and hers’ in our home along with my wife’s 48L for our first anniversary — the piece that made me fall in love all over again with the sandwich dial, the fiddy curves, and the first in-house movement. Those two have been quiet companions through many years.
And now the 5218AB joins them — not because it’s new, but because it brings me back to where the whole story began.
In the end, the watches that stand the test of time are rarely the most impressive on paper… they’re just the ones that stand the test of you.