Watches NEWS
Milus Kama Sutra Butterfly Watch Themed Cufflinks With Rotors
These cufflinks (cuff links? Space, no space?) might make you blush, but they are nice right? To me they combine a few thinks I like. Let's delay the obvious for now and focus on the awesome integration of the automatic rotors in the cufflinks. These are new 18k rose gold men's cufflinks from Milus, a Swiss watch maker who also dabbles in jewelry and accessories. ?? These nice looking men's accessories here are called Kama Sutra Butterfly cufflinks and are made in a casting process to help reproduce the look of a watch movement, which is the point. The cufflinks feature beautiful real rotating rotors (which wind nothing) that attached like normal rotors with a ball bearing mount. The casted gold has perlage polish and the look of a real movement engraved in the design. How cool! I've seen cufflinks similar to this, but none as well done. I imagine price will be up there.Aside from the brand name on the cufflink, you have the red and black motif of a butterfly, which is sorta feminine,
Hands-On: The IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar Reference 5035
The IWC Portugieser Annual Calendar debuted this year at the SIHH, as one of the most talked-about introductions from IWC. It’s essentially a variation on the Portuguese Automatic, which launched as the reference 5001 in 2004 but which was preceded by the limited edition Portuguese Automatic 2000, which housed the now-legendary IWC caliber 5000, the forefather of an entire family of movements in the Portuguese/Portugieser line of watches. (The Portuguese Automatic 2000 was available – in the year 2000, natch – in three metals – red gold, steel, and platinum – and you could buy all three as a boxed set the year they came out, for about $45,000.) The caliber 5000 featured a very technically interesting – but also very beautiful to watch – automatic winding system that had been designed by IWC’s legendary technical director Albert Pellaton, and the Portugieser Automatic, reference 5007, represents an accumulation of 15 years of technical ex
Extreme - and safe
Took the ceramic diver on honeymoon trip, visited Alaska and Grand Canyon as part of the trip. Been thru -30c arctic weather and didn't miss a beat. Well maybe a few Was going to take my DSSD for the extreme condition but decided on the diver last minute, glad it survived!
PP 5167 on small wrists?
Hi folks, I'm considering trading a few of my watches towards a nice PP 5167 or AP 15450.I haven't been able to find a 5167 to try on, but when I tried the 5164a in Vegas, I felt it too big on my skinny 6 flat wrists, particularly due to the bulge of the rubber strap.Here's a pic of the 5164 on my wrist:And the 15450, which felt better on my wrist:I know the 5167 is ~1mm smaller, but will it fit better on my small wrists or is the bulge still going to be an issue? Or should I try to find a pre-owned 5165 which is 38mm? Or go with the 15450?If I decide to opt for the 5165 or AP 15450, how do they hold their value if I decide to upgrade again in a few years?
Luminor Cases and Strap Change of PAM634
Hello everybody,After hearing all those complaints regarding the latest revisements on Luminor cases I thought it would be helpfull to some people to prepare a short video showing how to change the strap of the models with spring bar.As you can see on the video it seems much easier than using the screwdriver :Strap Change of PAM634I also made an article showing all the differences between 3 different Luminor cases with close up photos.Here is the link of the review :Luminor CasesMany thanks for reading.Serdar