6 Travel Watches: A Comparative Review I never intentionally set out to collect travel watches. Yet here I am, having recently purchased a sixth, and finding myself in possession of a small collection of carefully curated timepieces with dual-time display
A spectacular profile, for an amazing watch. The Globe Trotter is not my favorite Arnold and Son, but one which gives me a strong feeling. And even more impressive in the dark! Best, Nicolas
To share the spectacular dial, in the night. This is not the only dial they " lumed ". I will come back to that, soon. But the more I see their watches, the more I love their brand. Best, Nicolas
Another surprise, from Arnold And Son, this year, with this UltraThin Tourbillon. More sober, less spectacular than the GlobeTrotter or the Double Tourbillon, more classic, probably, too, this UltraThin Tourbillon plays the card of Elegance and Classicism
Anyone seen or own one? Arnold and Son have hit on something with this. Yes, at 45mm and 17.6mm high it seems daunting but it has short lugs and the bowl like domed sapphire accounts for much of the height. Punches well above its price point. No overhang…
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
Arnold & Son creates a watch with a large rotating 3D world-time display called the Globetrotter . It's housed in a 45mm stainless steel case with a 17.23mm height at its highest point of the domed sapphire crystal (10.4mm without the crystal). The Globet