started the week with this piece. have always enjoyed staring at the mechanism. looks like it's trying to hold back the ticking second hand, but in vain
Arnold & Son DSTB 42 (Dial-Side True Beat’) salmon dial. Arnold & Son is independent in spirit, creativity and technology but with financial backing from the Japanese Citizen Group.
How is it that 3 of your 8 are pieces I've lusted after for lord knows how long? (The PP annual calendar regulator, that particular LE Santos Dumont, and the DSTB. Your taste is impeccable! I hope they all come out for some wear time sooner, rather than l
Apologize for my delay in posting my veredict but it has been an hetic day for me today. With so many superb watches well worth receiving the title it was an almost impossible task to choose just one winner. Anyway I wish to name just a few of them here a
you have shared many nice photos and my favourite would be the 5th one with the water splashing. i have only one style when taking photos of my watches and thus, my favourites would mostly be photos of my favourite watches at the moment. so here goes some
and so i walked out of the store with the Arnold & Son DSTB the other day... simply couldn't resist and had to pull out my credit card... so here are some photos...
managed to try on the DSTB and Nebula today. i must say that watching the DSTB's deadbeat seconds mechanism is simply mesmerizing. and the Nebula is not too far off as well. these watches deserve more attention i think...
Tick tick tick tick…it must be a quartz watch because it is ticking. The very concept of ticking seconds tick most collectors off. “No it looks cheap, I don’t want people to mistake me for wearing a fake watch”, said a watch collector friend of mine. I li
My guess is that the size is partially about showing off the movements (or complications in the cases of the Perpetual Moon, DSTB, and Globetrotter). It looks to me as if the movements pretty much fill the cases in most of the A&S models - the 41.5mm