I've known of the Trilogy of Time series from learning about the history of Ulysse Nardin, but I'd never seen one in the metal. I was vacationing in Melbourne, Australia, and on a whim I checked Chrono24 to see what watches were available in Australia. Th
Watchmaking world and I assume a lot of independent contemporaneous inventions of similar ideas. One thing I would never do though is accuse Dr Oechslin of ripping someone else off without first having a mountain of evidence to support the claim. He is th
At first glance, it is as though a constellation has been captured in rose gold. Every so often, a watch appears that isn’t just a piece of craftsmanship, but a little piece of human history. A moment when art, science, and wonder come together. This is t
But with some repeated exposure here and elsewhere over the years I’ve definitely gained an appreciation for them. And admittedly it was not the Trilogy of Time which first launched UN onto my radar about two decades ago. That watch was of course the Frea
... such as the Trilogy of Time: Astrolabium, Planeatrium, Tellurium All of them powered by the ETA 2892A2. Then the selfwinding hourstriker with automaton, also based on that ETA workhorse: Talking about astronomical watches, there are also the gems made
I believe the base movement for all the trilogy of time pieces is an ETA 2892 (very heavily modified). One interesting thing is that on a watch winder my Tellurium requires less rotations to remain running than my 5711 (not that either are regularly kept
Following on from a recent suggestion I’m only too pleased to start this thread. The Trilogy of Time pieces are truly an amazing collection so to get things going here is my Tellurium.