Best Place To Buy BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 Replica Clearance


BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

With Baselworld just weeks away, we take a look at some of the new watches to have surfaced recently. We begin with Hublot’s fantastically awesome MP-05 LaFerrari Sapphire watch. If you thought the original MP-05 watch and its 50-day power reserve was extreme, this will surely knock your socks off as it is really just that same watch but with a case that’s constructed almost entirely out of sapphire. Next, we take a look at something more classic and restrained, and that’s Girard-Perregaux’s new Laureato watch. If a high-end stainless steel sports watch is on your to-get list this year, you’ll want to scroll down now and take a look at this new watch from Girard-Perregaux.

New watches aside, we also take a look at servicing. Servicing is an important aspect of watch ownership, and if a watch is taken care of properly, it will easily outlast you. However, servicing is also something that many owners take lightly. Here, we have a video that shows you exactly what happens during a full, complete service.

1. Christophe Claret Marguerite Watch Hands-On

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

Christophe Claret makes some wonderfully complicated pieces and we were pleasantly stunned by the Margot, the brand’s first ever watch for women in 2014. The Marguerite is Christophe Claret’s more youthful take on the Margot. After all, the Margot watch was named after Queen Margot, who was known as Marguerite in her young days. The Marguerite is essentially the more accessible version (relatively speaking, of course) of the Margot. It features the same “he loves me, he loves me not” game, but does away with the striking mechanism found in the Margot. Even so, it remains a remarkable and highly technical watch for ladies who appreciate high watchmaking.

Source: aBlogtoWatch

2. Hublot MP-05 LaFerrari Sapphire Watch Hands-On

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

Regardless of your thoughts about Hublot as a brand, it’s hard to argue against some of their very high-end technical pieces. The Hublot MP-05 LaFerrari is a fine example. It features a 50-day power reserve and the entire movement has been architected to resemble an engine from a Ferrari car. This makes perfect sense, after all, as Hublot is the official high-end watch brand associated with Ferrari. Now, Hublot is taking the MP-05 even further with the MP-05 LaFerrari Sapphire watch. Yup, the watch case is constructed almost entirely using sapphire crystal. It offers an unobstructed view of the magnificent movement within and is quite a sight to behold. You know you want to see more of this watch, so hit the link below.

Source: aBlogtoWatch

3. Girard-Perregaux Laureato 2016 Watch Hands-On

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

It’s a pity that when people mention iconic stainless steel timepieces, one usually does not immediately think of Girard-Perregaux. You see, the brand’s Laureato watch was actually one of the earlier stainless steel watches to come out after Audemars Piguet’s Royal Oak – just three years after the Royal Oak and a year ahead of the iconic Nautilus from Patek Philippe, in fact. Furthermore, when it was launched, Girard-Perregaux wanted to show off their technological prowess and released it with an in-house made quartz movement. That’s pretty badass, in my books. For 2016, Girard-Perregaux is returning to the roots of the Laureato and has released a new Laureato watch that shares many design cues with its forebear, but with a mechanical movement, of course.

Source: aBlogtoWatch

4. Art Student’s 407-Piece Hand-Carved Wooden Clock Literally Writes The Time

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

The contraption you see above is simply amazing. For starters, it consists of over 400 hand-carved pieces of wood. Next, it tells the time by using four magnetic pens to write on a magnetic drawing board, and it does this every minute. Perhaps what’s most amazing of all is that this remarkable clock is the work of 22-year-old Suzuki Kango, a senior student at the Tohoku University of Art and Design. Give that boy his degree already, I say!

Source: aBlogtoWatch

5. Study Confirms Watch Industry Retail Sector Hurt By Gray Market & Excess Inventory

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

The watch industry is generally quite secretive, on the whole, in many regards and for different reasons. I think one of the most misunderstood aspects of the watch industry is the gray market and how excess inventory is dealt with. This creates a unique scenario in which there is no price parity between regions, which results in watch lovers heading to non-authorized avenues to buy watches that they like. This, of course, causes a problem for watch brands. But this is a bit of a Catch-22 situation for them because the gray market is also essential to their business. If you are interested in the watch industry generally or if you want to understand more about the gray market, this is well worth a read.

Source: aBlogtoWatch

6. Jaeger-LeCoultre Geophysic True Second Watch Hands-On

BEST FROM: aBlogtoWatch & Friends February 26, 2016 ABTW Round-Ups

Often referred to as the watchmaker’s watch brand, Jaeger-LeCoultre’s new Geophysic True Second watch is one of our favorite, and most unique, dress watches in recent memory. The design is unmistakably conservative and classic, though the movement is anything but. To begin, though it has a mechanical movement, the seconds hand ticks instead of sweeps. That’s because it has a “true second” or “dead seconds” complication. The other thing is that it has a new type of balance wheel that Jaeger-LeCoultre calls a Gyrolab balance wheel, which was designed to reduce friction and improve efficiency. So you see, underneath the conservative facade actually beats a movement that is really cutting-edge. There’s a lot more to discover about this piece, so have a read.

Source: aBlogtoWatch

Reading the time is pretty simple, actually, but given that it’s a regulator fashion display, you’ll need to look at the same area for the moments and another for the hour. Yes, this is a essential trade-off for getting this unique way of displaying the time. The subsidiary seconds indicator disc is not super simple to view either, but in the end of the day, its primary use is to create some visual motion on the dial – this isn’t a tool-style watch worn whenever someone would like to measure the time with intense precision.On the wrist, the HYT H4, at the HYT H4 Gotham at 3DTP carbon, is quite comfortable, given that the lightweight and the brief lugs. Yes, it is a sizable timepiece, but without the bulk of most other 51mm wide watches, it is extremely wearable. The visual experience is excellent, and everyone appears to adore the liquid time-telling signal system. Obviously, it is also a traditional timepiece, regardless of the ultra-modern “fluid mechanics” layout, with its hand-beveled and decorated movement.While the motion is cool, it ought to be babied a bit. For example, you can not quickly set the time – but rather, you do it a bit more gradually in a watch like this. The reason is due to the way the liquid hour index system works. Turning the crown gradually moves among the bellows and the liquid responds in kind due to the change in pressure. For this reason, you want to be somewhat gentle when changing time – but I think that is something most folks would do naturally awarded the avant-garde nature of this mechanical idea.

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