Monthly Archives: December 2023

Replica Panerai Delves Into Pastels with New Luminor Due 38mm

Panerai is known for being conservative when it comes to color. That makes its three new additions to the Luminor Due 38mm collection are all the more refreshing. The timepieces feature the brand’s signature sandwich dials in modern pastel light blue, green, and powdery pink, with the subsidiary seconds at 9 o’clock and the date indication at 3 o’clock.

In the world of luxury timepieces, Panerai replica watches has always been known for its bold and robust designs. However, the brand is now venturing into a new territory by introducing pastel hues to its collection. The latest addition to their lineup is the Replica Panerai Luminor Due 38mm, featuring a refreshing and stylish twist on the classic design.

The Luminor Due series is recognized for its slim profile, making it perfect for those seeking a more refined and elegant timepiece. With the new 38mm size, Panerai is catering to a wider audience, including both men and women who prefer smaller, more versatile watches. The addition of pastel colors adds a touch of playfulness and vibrancy to the collection, making it an ideal choice for those looking to make a statement.

One standout model from this new selection is the Luminor Due 38mm in pastel blue. The stainless steel case is beautifully complemented by a matching blue alligator leather strap, creating a harmonious and eye-catching combination. The dial features Panerai’s signature sandwich design, with luminescent Arabic numerals and hour markers, ensuring excellent legibility in any lighting conditions. The small seconds sub-dial positioned at 9 o’clock adds a touch of complexity to the otherwise clean and minimalist dial.

Underneath the sleek exterior, the Luminor Due 38mm houses a reliable automatic movement, ensuring accurate timekeeping and a power reserve of up to 72 hours. The sapphire crystal case back allows for a glimpse into the intricate inner workings of the watch, showcasing Panerai’s commitment to craftsmanship and attention to detail.

The introduction of pastel colors in the Luminor Due 38mm collection demonstrates Panerai’s willingness to embrace new trends and cater to evolving customer preferences. These softer tones add a refreshing twist to the brand’s traditionally bold aesthetic, appealing to individuals who desire a watch that combines both elegance and personality.

Whether worn casually or for more formal occasions, the Replica Panerai Luminor Due 38mm in pastel hues is sure to make a statement on the wrist. Its versatile size and playful colors allow for endless styling possibilities, adding a touch of vibrancy and sophistication to any outfit.

In conclusion, the Replica Panerai Luminor Due 38mm collection brings a delightful blend of pastel colors and refined design to the world of luxury timepieces. With its slim profile, reliable movement, and attention to detail, this collection offers a fresh and exciting option for watch enthusiasts seeking a touch of whimsy in their wristwear.

 

Replica Cartier Introduces Two New “Mysterious” Complications in its Fine Watchmaking Collection

Much as Breguet has embraced the tourbillon, and Patek Philippe the minute repeater, as signature horological specialties, Cartier has adopted the technology of the groundbreaking “mystery clock” — born in 1912 of a collaboration between brand founder Louis Cartier and watchmaker Maurice Coüet — to inspire several of the pieces in its Fine Watchmaking collection, including, most recently and notably, last year’s Rotonde de Replica Cartier Astromysterieux. The “mystery” refers to the elements on the dial, such as hands and tourbillon carriages, which appear to be floating in midair rather than anchored to a movement but are actually attached to stacked sapphire disks driven by the gear train of the cleverly hidden movement.

The Rotonde de Cartier Skeleton Mysterious Double Tourbillon Watch (above), powered by Cartier’s in-house Caliber 9465MC, is — you guessed it — a skeletonized version of the first Mysterious Double Tourbillon model, which made its debut in 2013. As in that watch, a double flying tourbillon, completing a rotation in 60 seconds, and its cage, which performs a second rotation every five minutes, appears to float in mid-air, unconnected to the rest of the movement, while sword-shaped, blued-steel hour and minute hands keep the time in an off-centered position at 12 o’clock. For this new iteration, the movement’s bridges have been skeletonized into the shape of Roman numerals — a design flourish that has become a hallmark of Cartier’s skeletonized timepieces in recent years (check out 2016’s Clé de Cartier Automatic Skeleton, for example).

The watch’s round, 45-mm case is made of platinum, with a beaded crown set with a sapphire cabochon, another mainstay element of Cartier’s Rotonde de Cartier series. This decorative crown is used to manually wind the skeletonized, 286-part movement, which features 26 jewels, a 21,600-vph frequency, and a 52-hour power reserve and is enhanced with chamfering on the bridges, drawn flanks, and polished screw heads. All of these embellishments are on display in both the front and back of the watch through sapphire crystals. The strap is  navy blue alligator, with a folding buckle made of 18k white gold. The replica watch, whose price will be announced at SIHH 2018, will be limited to 30 numbered pieces.

The other new piece that Replica Cartier watches has shown us pre-SIHH represents a first for the brand’s Fine Watchmaking collection, combining the architecture of the “mysterious” movement —developed, as mentioned above, for Cartier’s famed “Model A” Mystery Clock in 1912 — with a day-night indicator that was incorporated into another historical Cartier clock, known as the Comet clock or Planet clock. The Rotonde de Cartier Mysterious Day & Night Watch (above) features a stylized sun and moon arcing from left to right across the top half of the dial, indicating the hours on Roman numerals on the flange, while the minutes are displayed in the bottom half by means of a blued, retrograde pointer hand. moving in the opposite direction on a scale from “00” to “60.” The luxurious look of the timepiece is accentuated by the radiating guilloché and satin-brushed sunray finish on the dial, most prominently in the bottom half but also on the brown dial flange.

The 40-mm 18k rose-gold case houses the Cartier manufacture Caliber 9982MC, manually wound by the beaded, cabochon-set crown, which is on display through a clear sapphire caseback. The movement is composed of 174 parts, including 26 jewels, and has a frequency of 28,800 vph and a minimum power reserve of 48 hours. The warm gold of the case (Cartier says a white-gold version will also be released) resonates nicely with the gray alligator skin strap, culminating in a rose-gold folding clasp.

Replica Hublot Watches Unveils Big Bang Integral Tourbillon Fully Clad in Sapphire

Hublot’s expertise In making watch cases out of sapphire is, at this point, beyond reproach. The Nyon-based manufacture was the first watch manufacturer to produce such cases on an industrial scale, in 2016, and has remained a pioneer in that field during the five years since. “But what,” aficionados of such innovations might ask, “has Hublot done for us lately?” The answer came last week at the Replica Watches & Wonders virtual watch fair: “How about an entire watch — case and bracelet — made out of sapphire?” Here’s a closer look at the Big Bang Integral Tourbillon Full Sapphire, a revolutionary timepiece in which the materials are just the tip of the iceberg.

The watch melds two of Hublot’s most noteworthy developments of recent times — its new “Integral” case construction with an integrated bracelet, which debuted in last January’s Big Bang Integral chronograph models, and its recently launched automatic tourbillon movement, Caliber HUB6035, which took its opening bow in a trio of Big Bang models last year, including a showcase piece with an orange-tinted, translucent sapphire case. The latest incarnation of Hublot’s first self-winding tourbillon also finds itself housed in a case made of sapphire, this one fully transparent, made up of no fewer than 37 separate components, all painstakingly machined from the material, which is traditionally used solely for the crystal of a watch. The dial, such as it is, also consists of a clear sapphire disk, with satin-finished, rhodium-plated hour appliqués and hands, all coated with white Super-LumiNova.

Hublot Replica Watches says that its engineers had to entirely restructure the classic Big Bang case to remove nearly all of its visible screws and overhaul its geometry and profile to integrate it into the sapphire bracelet, as well as to rework bridges and plates of the movement to give them the illusion of being suspended in space. The bracelet, of course, was also a challenge: made up of 165 pieces, 22 of them sapphire and a third of them “specially designed to provide unique harmony with the transparency of the case,” it features minuscule titanium inserts developed in-house that don’t protrude from either side of the bracelet links, which help ensure fluidity and flexibility on the wrist.

Visible from the front and back of the clear, 30-meter water-resistant case is the automatic Caliber MHUB6035, whose openworked design is balanced by a tourbillon at 12 o’clock and a 22k gold micro-rotor, with a skeleton “Hublot” logo, at 6 o’clock, which helps the movement amass its three-day (72-hours) power reserve. Equipped with ceramic ball bearings and Hublot’s advanced winding system, it is enhanced with high-end horological decorations including beveling, sunray brushing, and sandblasting. Among the components that appear to float freely in space are three bridges made of sapphire — the barrel bridge, automatic bridge, and tourbillon barette. The openworked construction and extreme transparency of the case allows light to enter and illuminate the movement from all directions, creating intriguing combinations of diffused, refracted, and reflected surfaces.

Finishing touches include the best replica watch reviews polished sapphire bezel with characteristic H-shaped screws, an engraved limited-edition number (out of only 30 pieces being produced) on the caseback, and deployant clasp made of titanium to secure the sapphire bracelet to the wrist.

IWC Replica Conquers the Night Skies with Fully Luminous Dial in Latest Pilot’s Watch

Let There Be Light! IWC Replica Watches introduces the Pilot’s Watch Automatic 41 Black Aces, the latest timepiece inspired by its collaborations with U.S. Navy squadrons. The most striking feature of this picture-perfect pilot’s watch is the fully luminous white Lumicast dial. Developed in collaboration with pilots from the “Black Aces”, a Strike Fighter Squadron 41 (VFA-41) based at Naval Air Station Lemoore in California, the dial is the result of a complex manufacturing process.

In the first step, high-grade Superluminova pigments are mixed with a binder, cast into a circular mold, and hardened in a specially developed curing process to give the material a ceramic-like durability. The resulting solid disc is then fixed onto the soft-iron dial blank. Finally, the dial is imprinted with black indices and numerals and the “Black Aces” patch, resembling the ace of spades from a card deck. In dark chamber tests, the dial emitted a bright greenish light for more than 23 hours, taking legibility and night visibility to a new level.

The case of the Pilot’s fake luxury watch Automatic 41 Black Aces is made of black zirconium oxide ceramic with a stealthy matte-black look. With a Vickers rating second only to that of diamonds, ceramic ranks among the hardest substances on Earth, making it not only make it the perfect case material in the restricted space of a jet cockpit but also for everyday use.

The case back is made of lightweight titanium and features an engraving of the “Black Aces” twin-engine jet against a backdrop of spades. The Pilot’s Watch Automatic 41 Black Aces is powered by the IWC-manufactured 32100 caliber. Combined with the soft-iron inner case, the movement’s anti-magnetic silicon escapement further improves the watch’s resistance to magnetic fields. The efficient double pawl winding system builds up a power reserve of 72 hours in the mainspring. The watch is fitted with a black textile strap with a pin buckle in sand-blasted stainless steel and available exclusively online at IWC.com.

Testing the Replica Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch Professional Master Chronometer

Omega Replica kicked off the year 2021 with a bang by elevating the legendary Moonwatch to Master Chronometer. Although this watch is equipped with the latest movement technology, detailed observations in our test find that its exterior remains true to the design of the cult model.

Affectionately nicknamed the “Moonwatch” because it accompanied astronauts who landed on the moon, this Speedmaster has become a cult watch that is always only gently revised.

While Omega Replica announced that it wanted to exclude the Moonwatch from the first Master Chronometer certification more than six years ago, the manufacturer now presents the next generation of models. There are a now total of eight new versions in stainless steel and Omega’s proprietary precious metals (Sedna red gold and Canopus white gold), either with a historically inspired Hesalite crystal or a contemporary sapphire crystal, with a closed metal back or a transparent sapphire crystal in the back, attached to a leather, nylon or metal strap, and each with a five-year warranty.

Whichever Moonwatch you choose — a lower-priced model like our test watch with Hesalite crystal, closed back and stainless-steel bracelet for $6,300 or the most expensive version in 18k Canopus white gold for $45,300 — you always wear a piece of authenticity on your wrist. Omega’s President and CEO Raynald Aeschlimann explained, “When you redesign a cult watch like the Speedmaster Moonwatch, every detail must remain true to the original spirit of the timepiece. This chronograph is known around the world, so we approached its design with great respect, while at the same time elevating the movement to the next level of watchmaking.”

Omega plans to certify all of its new watches in 2023 as Master Chronometers. Today, 99.99 percent of its watches already earn this distinction. And Omega accomplishes this with an annual production of between 600,000 and 700,000 watches.

The Moonwatch is also offered in Sedna gold (right) and Canopus gold (left).

The Moonwatch Master Chronometer Pays Tribute to the Past
Omega definitely shows respect for the past. The current Speedmaster Moonwatch Professional Co-Axial Master Chronometer Chronograph 42 mm, as this timepiece is known by its full name, is inspired by the fourth generation of the Moonwatch, which was worn by the astronauts of the Apollo 11 mission when they flew to the moon in 1969. Insiders often refer to this model as Ref. ST 105.012.

Ref. ST 105.012 and Ref. ST 145.012 have asymmetrical cases because of their crown protectors. This protection was added after NASA saw a danger due to the possibility of inadvertently adjusting the crown and thus the time display. Ref. ST 105.012 and Ref. ST 145.012 are the officially certified models and have had the word “Professional” on their dials since 1966. Before that, this lettering had previously adorned only a few examples of Ref. ST 105.003. Buzz Aldrin is said to have worn an ST 105.012 when he stepped onto the lunar surface, while Michael Collins kept an ST 145.012 strapped to his wrist as he waited inside the capsule.

Be that as it may, our test watch (Ref. 310.30.42.50.01.001) has the same classic asymmetrical case, which provides reliable protection against shocks and accidental operation with the combination of historically correct hat-shaped pushers and a knurled crown on its right side. The crown is quite heavy and difficult to grasp because of its flank protection. And it takes quite a few possibly arduous rotations of the crown to replenish the full 50-hour power reserve of hand-wound Caliber 3861.

Nevertheless, manual winding is a popular ritual among watch enthusiasts, as is evident in increase in the number of hand-wound fake watches available on the today’s market. If you forget to wind this watch for more than two consecutive days, you’ll also need to manually adjust its hands. But this task is easily accomplished by slipping a fingernail under the crown, and gently lifting it into its outer position. The crown has no middle position because the Moonwatch lacks a date display. Instead, Caliber 3861 provides a stop-seconds function to facilitate accurate time setting. To-the-second setting really makes sense here because this watch runs no less reliably than the phases of the moon. As a Master Chronometer, it deviates from perfect timekeeping by only 1 second per day in all situations — whether fully wound, with its chronograph running or not running, and on or off the wrist. Also noteworthy are the small rate differences among the individual positions and the stable amplitudes, both when the power reserve is decreasing and in each of the several positions.

The historical legacy of the Moonwatch includes a Hesalite crystal and an aluminum bezel with tachymeter scale.

The chronograph’s pushers are pleasant to use, with pressure points that feel surprisingly even and a make a very secure impression both haptically and audibly.

When you start the chronograph, the slender elapsed-seconds hand with its arrow-shaped luminous tip is also set in motion. Six subdivisions per second correctly match the movement’s frequency of 21,600 vibrations per hour. Caliber 3861 was adapted from and is essentially based on the historical Caliber 861. Omega also gets the subdivisions on the stop-seconds scale absolutely right, with two subdividing strokes for three hertz. These tidy strokes are arranged along the outer rim of the so-called “step dial,” which is slightly elevated in the middle, where three subdials are positioned in the classic tricompax arrangement. These details combine to create a harmonious picture with historical authenticity that’s further affirmed by the high curve along the rim of the Hesalite crystal.
Hesalite rather than sapphire for the crystal is the most authentic allusion to the Moonwatch’s heritage, but Hesalite scratches readily, as also became apparent in our wearing test on the wrist. If you don’t like its susceptibility to scratches, you can opt for a sapphire crystal and, in this combination, a second sapphire crystal in the caseback. The double sapphire model then costs you $7,150 with a stainless-steel bracelet or $6,800 with a leather strap.

The finely crafted stainless-steel bracelet ends in a folding clasp with Omega’s logo and a historically authentic color scheme.

The Master Chronometer Caliber Refers to the Historical Movement
In keeping with its ancestor, the double beveled screw-in back is closed on our test watch with a Hesalite crystal above the dial. Various engravings and inscriptions refer to historical events as well as to the inner workings of Caliber 3861.

Omega worked for more than four years on this caliber, which premiered in spring 2019. The starting point for its development was Caliber 861, which had been built since 1968 on the basis of Lemania’s Caliber 1873. This mechanical chronograph had a frequency of 21,600 vibrations per hour and included counters for 30 elapsed minutes and 12 elapsed hours, cam switching and horizontal gear coupling. In addition to all these features, Caliber 3861 also preserved Caliber 861’s dimensions of 27 mm in diameter and 6.87 mm in height.

The one-sided deployant clasp with polished Omega logo is also satin finished and is designed to be reminiscent of earlier Moonwatch models. A small but quite important detail for enthusiasts and collectors is the “dot over 90,” the point about the 90 that was on the side of the dial in some previous models as well as the dot at the 70, which is now diagonally below the 70 on the anodized aluminum bezel. These model-defining details continue to write history with the legendary Moonwatch, even if they are, quite rightly, ticking with a modern movement.