Introducing Tiffany Lock

Tiffany & Co. unveils its latest all-gender icon
by Mariam Yasin

Tiffany & Co. announced the debut of its newest jewelry collection: Tiffany Lock. Distinctive and modern, Tiffany Lock is a bold visual statement about the personal bonds with others—and how these bonds inform who we are. The new collection will debut with four all-gender bracelets available globally this September.

“Tiffany Lock is an elegant interpretation of an archival functional design,” said Alexandre Arnault, Executive Vice President, Product and Communication, Tiffany & Co. “Defined by modern, clean lines and a breakthrough clasp mechanism, Tiffany Lock represents an exciting new pillar to our diamond and gold jewelry offering. We are thrilled to unveil our latest icon.”

“No rules. All welcome.” is the spirit behind the new Tiffany Lock collection; the 18k yellow and rose gold bracelets are designed for everyone. Re-envisioning the idea of a padlock, an important motif from The Tiffany Archives, the collection transforms it into an audacious symbol of togetherness and inclusivity. Available with diamonds or in metal-only styles, the clasp features an innovative swiveling mechanism that echoes the functionality of a padlock.

Girard-Perregaux Laureato

42mm Pink Gold & Onyx
by Mariam Yasin

When the Laureato was originally launched in 1975, it won the hearts and minds of design aficionados and watch collectors alike. While other contemporary watches have come and gone over the years, only a handful have endured and the Laureato is one of them. The Maison is pleased to unveil a new timeless addition to the Laureato family, the Girard-Perregaux Laureato 42mm, a timepiece housed in a pink gold case, paired with a handcrafted black onyx dial and equipped with an in-house mechanical movement.

Available in Girard-Perregaux retailers worldwide from September, the 42 mm case is presented in 18-carat pink golf and upholds the Laureato tradition of juxtaposing polished and satin finished surfaces throughout. A matching pink gold bracelet provides a fitting means of uniting the watch with its wearer while the noble hues of the case paired with the handcrafted black dial draws on the expertise of time-served craftspeople who shape and polish the material by hand. The self-winding movement  has a power reserve of 54 hours and encompasses a myriad of refined details such as bevelling, mirror polishing, and various engravings.

Louis Vuitton Spirit

High Jewellery Collection
by Mariam Yasin

The very essence of Louis Vuitton’s spirit is captured in the boldness, novelty and singular intensity of the fourth High Jewellery collection designed by Francesca Amfitheatrof, the Maison’s Artistic Director for Watches and Jewellery.

Spanning 125 spectacular pieces, Louis Vuitton Spirit is an initiatory jewellery odyssey, infused with the power of mythological creatures that the contemporary Louis Vuitton woman will recognize herself in.

The Louis Vuitton Spirit collection brings together concepts held dear by the Maison; not only liberty, strength, and the notion of infinity, but also the ideas of destiny and of soaring to new heights. Francesca Amfitheatrof has taken the mythology around fantastical creatures and transposed it to the 21st century. “Like a phoenix rising from the ashes to take flight, or a dragon breathing protective fire, the Louis Vuitton woman exudes amazing strength, energy and optimism,” says Amfitheatrof. “It is that very femininity – so emancipating and emblematic of the Maison – that I wanted to embody in Spirit.”

To express all the vitality that drives this adventure in jewellery, triangle shapes and Vuitton Vs are omnipresent, forging a new, modern and high-impact visual language.“It reads as the Vuitton V and resembles an arrow, which was the earliest graphic symbol ever created by humans – pointing the direction, it constantly urges us forward.”

Louis Vuitton combines its unique designs with extraordinary gems. This astonishing collection is set in five universes, each reflective of the Maison’s values: Liberty, Grace, Fantasy, Radiance and Destiny. It required over 40,000 hours of work in the Parisian ateliers, which yet again outdid themselves in their levels of mastery and technical prowess.

Ulysse Nardin Diver x Skeleton Black

The Skeleton Diving Watch Makes a Come Back
by Mariam Yasin

Following the success of the DIVER X SKELETON in blue released in 2021, Ulysse Nardin relaunches 175 new pieces in black Carbonium® with an audacious choice of a bright yellow rubber strap and a black R-STRAP made of upcycled fishing nets.

This cutting-edge evolution of the existing Diver X collection retains its sporty appeal while taking a radical step towards transparency. As the new hero watch of the Diver collection, the DIVER X SKELETON model is an explosive amalgamation of the design of a Diver and the technical prowess of the Blast collection. The DIVER X SKELETON BLACK is designed to withstand the potential pressures that exist at depths of 200 meters and is equipped with a black Carbonium® concave unidirectional rotating bezel and domed sapphire glass.

To bring the DIVER X SKELETON model to life, the engineering team has completely redesigned the UN-371 movement, which is visible through the 44 mm case. Originally designed for the Blast Skeleton collection, it has been improved with the addition of an oscillating weight in the shape of the iconic “X” – one of the most technical and complex developments ever undertaken by Ulysse Nardin. The hour indexes had to be secretly connected to the dial, so they appear to be floating. Different levels of finish were also employed to create a play of light, amplified by the transparency of the skeleton movement.

Gucci High Jewelry Collection

‘Hortus Deliciarum’ featuring Celebrated Actress Jessica Chastain
by Mariam Yasin

Gucci presents the third act of Hortus Deliciarum, the High Jewelry collection designed by Creative Director Alessandro Michele.

Composed of unique pieces divided into five themes, this new encounter with the world of jewelry gathers together the passions and obsessions of an imaginary Grand Tour. Starting in the mid-nineteenth century and continuing to the 1970s, this fantastical journey is suspended in time and space as it creates a ‘memory of memories’.

The resulting jewelry collection embodies an ethical, aesthetic value by bringing together different cultures and restoring the splendor of rarities existing side by side. The pieces are products of experience and a kind of travel that distills, bringing together the past and the present while provoking clashes and encounters to build a multi-faceted future. This creative tension brings forth a High Jewelry collection whose value is intrinsic both within the imaginative process and to the material from which the evocative power of its story has developed.

Some memorizing highlights of the collection include the micro-mosaics of ancient Italian landscape brought to life as cameos embedded in sparkling peridot, yellow beryl, red and pink spinel, blue topaz, fire opal, pink tourmaline and colorful diamonds. As well as a tribute to the mystery of the pearl through the mythologies of Aphrodite and Cleopatra, featuring white, cream and black pearls combined with imperial topaz to create sautoirs paired with earrings and brooches; while the psychedelic colors of necklaces in white gold chains, diamonds holding real talismans in hexagonal emerald, pear-shaped green tourmaline, and aquamarine set in a green enamel frame enclosing baguette-cut diamonds highlight the the pop culture of 1970s.

Piaget Rose

A Symbol of Taste and Joy
by Mariam Yasin

Sophisticated but extravagant. Yves Piaget and his favorite flower, the rose, share these attributes, embodied today in three new jewelry sets and a timekeeper.

To celebrate this very special 40th anniversary of the Yves Piaget rose flower creation, the Maison is presenting three new sets of novelties that let the Piaget rose’s pure beauty and audacity shine through, combining Piaget’s gold craftsmanship with colored gemstones handpicked by their designers and gemmologists.

As a firework of extravaganza, the Rose gold set, composed of an original ear cuff porté, a ring and a unique necklace, contrast with the other two sets inspired by the delicate changing colors of Yves Piaget’s garden.

Piaget does not stop the expression of this fascination in its jewelry creations but also explores the world of watchmaking by revealing a new addition to the Altiplano collection. Seeking beauty in its floral engravings, this watch is the ultimate expression of Piaget innovation and design. It took more than two years to develop the rose bracelet, made from one of the most delicate materials in the world: real flower petals.

The Altiplano Tourbillon Rose in white gold is an ultra-thin timeless watch for those who like to adorn their wrists with style, joyfulness and mastery.

From ears to wrists, from neck to fingers, in 2022, the Piaget Rose shines on and makes every second count.

MBandF Legacy Machine Sequential EVO

One movement. Two chronographs. Multiple timing modes.
by Mariam Yasin


Introducing Legacy Machine Sequential EVO, featuring the debut appearance of MB&F’s 20th movement, in the first chronograph wristwatch of MB&F and the first chronograph wristwatch of its kind. Conceived by one of the very earliest MB&F collaborators and Friends, Stephen McDonnell, LM Sequential EVO explodes the current limits of what we thought chronographs could do.

The dial plate of LM Sequential EVO, available in atomic orange or coal black, features two chronograph displays. One has its seconds display at 9 o’clock and minutes display at 11 o’clock. The other has its seconds display at 3 o’clock and minutes display at 1 o’clock. Each of these chronograph displays can be started, stopped, and reset completely independently of each other, using the start/stop and reset pushers on their respective sides of the case. These make up the four chronograph pushers you would usually associate with having two chronograph mechanisms in one watch.

However, there is a fifth pusher, located at the 9 o’clock position: the “Twinverter”. This pusher is the secret that elevates the functionality of the LM Sequential EVO beyond any existing chronograph wristwatch. It controls both chronograph systems, operating as a binary switch that inverts the current start/stop status of each chronograph.

Legacy Machine Perpetual EVO was launched in 2020, introducing the EVO collection into the world of MB&F. Based on the established codes of the Legacy Machine collection, EVO placed wearability, robustness and versatility at the core of its identity.

Zirconium was used in the launch edition of the LM Perpetual EVO, and is now the debut case material for the LM Sequential EVO. It is a silvery-grey metal admired for its deep lustre, that is lighter than stainless steel and more durable than titanium. A no-bezel case design highlights the movement within, allowing the finely balanced and symmetrical work of Stephen McDonnell to be fully showcased while an integrated rubber strap, an essential EVO feature, makes for the smoothest wearing experience of any MB&F Machine ever.

Tiffany & Co. Presents Elsa Peretti

Diamonds by the Yard®
by Mariam Yasin

Presenting Tiffany & Co. Elsa Peretti Diamonds by the Yard®, a stylish collection featuring a range of versatile, everyday diamonds.  Elsa Peretti created her revolutionary Diamonds by the Yard® collection in 1974 as an homage to a bezel-set diamond ring that her grandmother wore every day.

In her pursuit to make diamonds more wearable and to give them an everyday sensibility, Peretti’s strands of bezel-set diamonds measuring one yard instantly captivated women around the world. Her approach was based on simple, organic shapes and diamonds of varying sizes positioned gracefully along precious metal chains that scintillate like droplets of light against the skin.

The most iconic Diamond by the Yard® styles are the 72-inch and 36-inch sprinkle diamond necklaces and the 16-inch single diamond pendant.

Embodying the effortless elegance that the designer imbued in all her creations, Peretti’s indelible Diamonds by the Yard® collection forever changed the way diamonds were worn—all day, every day and always.

“My client is myself. A working woman. It was the ’60s, early ’70s, and there was a new generation of working women, who wanted to buy jewelry for themselves, jewelry to wear day and night. Jewelry to represent their freedom,”  said Elsa Peretti.

Jacob & Co. Astronomia Solar Bitcoin

Keeping Time in Crypto
by Mariam Yasin

Limited to only 25 pieces, Jacob & Co. releases a new, ground-breaking, high complication timepiece. Housed in a 44 mm, black DLC titanium case, the  Astronomia Solar Bitcoin is a symbolic and horological tribute to the fascinating world of cryptocurrency.

Featuring Bitcoin-related elements within its vertical and rotating manufacture movement, Jacob & Co. creates a watch that’s powerfully metaphorical. With a Jacob-cut diamond, a Jacob-cut orange sapphire and a rotating Earth, the brand adds its own craft as an ode those successful individuals who have mastered Bitcoin. Twenty-five privileged watch collectors will have access to the multi-rotational piece, which can be purchased in the cryptocurrency of their choosing.

With the Astronomy Solar Bitcoin, Jacob & Co. engages an exciting crowd, eager to celebrate the advent of the age of cryptocurrency, with a strongly illustrative timepiece. The black DLC titanium of this timepiece is interspersed with details and features that are directly linked to the Bitcoin universe such as a Bitcoin currency logo, a flying tourbillon, a yellow sapphire sun, a diamond moon, a golden Earth and even miniature rocket ship to reach for the moon. All these symbols tell the story of the advent of the first cryptocurrency, from abstraction to reality, from outlier to a mainstay of the financial system.

Gary Getz is one of the Leading Watch Collectors in the World and a Key Figure in the Global Watch Collecting Community. He has an exceptional and diverse collection of watches, featuring pieces from mainstream brands, independent watchmakers, and vintage pieces. Gary frequently shares his collecting-wisdom on Quill & Pad, and being an accomplished photographer, has one of the best Instagram watch pages (@garyg_1), enough to make one drool. It is a pleasure to have the opportunity to interview him for Katsbling.

[Kunal Khemka] Hi Gary, Welcome to Katsbling and a Huge Thanks for this opportunity to interview you. I do not recall exactly when I first learnt about you. It must have been on one of the watch groups on Facebook. Now I am an avid follower of you on Instagram and Quill & Pad. Your Instagram posts and published articles on Quill & Pad are a huge source of learning and inspiration for me.
Please tell me a bit about yourself, especially your watch collecting journey. Did you have an interest in watches and clocks when growing up? How did the interest in horology come about? Initially, which brands, and type of watches did you collect? And how did this person evolve into the Gary Getz who is one of the Top Watch collectors in the world.

[Gary Getz] Thanks for inviting me! It’s always great to talk with a fellow enthusiast and share views with our watch community.
Like many people, my starting point was a watch owned by my Grandfather – a pocket watch that I still own today. It’s not at all valuable in monetary terms but I always associated it with him and on the occasions when he would pop open the back cover I was amazed by the shiny bits and moving balance and gears.
I was about 10 years old when my Dad bought me my first watch of my own, a Timex Marlin. On a student trip to Europe, I bought the first watch I paid for myself: a Bucherer chronometer with a blue dial that I still have. For years after that, the interest was strong, but the wallet was weak! It wasn’t until the early 1990s that I discovered Jaeger-LeCoultre and bought my first Reverso, and the early 2000s that I became aware of the world of independent watchmaking. It’s been a slippery slope since then! At that time the forums, including PuristS and TimeZone, were an immense influence on me and a wonderful source of learning; I can credit the friends I made there, many of whom I still see in person today, for helping me to refine my tastes and find my way through the collecting journey so far.

[KK] Which are some of your favorite watch brands? And why?

[GG] I’ve bought and owned more JLC watches than any other brand; there’s something about their history as the industry’s leading movement developer that always appealed to me, and the Reverso in its many forms is a watch that fits me well and that I enjoy wearing.

Among the big brands, for me it’s primarily Lange, Patek Philippe, and Vacheron Constantin that have taken other central roles. Each does beautiful work and covers the gamut from very simple watches to amazingly complicated ones; and as I’ve had the opportunity to get to know people at each brand my interest has become a personal one as well as a horological one.

[KK] Favorite type of watches? Favorite type of complications and grand complications?

[GG] My interests, and my collection, are eclectic! If I count them up, it seems that somehow, I’ve managed to own a bunch of different chronographs over the years, as well as a variety of calendar and perpetual calendar pieces, so perhaps those rise to the top of the list. And I had a tourbillon phase, but over the past few years have sold off a few of those.

While I do own a select set of vintage watches, I’m primarily interested in contemporary watchmaking and in supporting the work of living watchmakers who are creating tomorrow’s vintage masterpieces.

My favorite high complications are chiming watches, but excellent ones are hugely expensive! I’ve only owned one, a Reverso Repetition Minutes that I bought over a dozen years ago from a friend and that I still enjoy.

 

[KK] You are an ardent supporter of Independent Watchmaking. What led you to go down this path? Among the independents, who are your favorites? Any memorable story or experience with an independent watchmaker which you would like to share here?

[GG] Where to start with independent watchmakers? Let’s just say that I’m honored to know many of the greats, including Dufour, Voutilainen, Halter, Journe, Forsey, Gauthier, Ballouard, Speake, Asaoka, the Grönefelds and the Habrings – the list goes on and on – and to own their watches. And the new generation of brilliant young makers, including Rexhep Rexhepi, Gael Petermann and Florian Bedat, Luca Soprana, and Raul Pages, very much has my attention – and I believe they deserve the attention of the whole watch world.

One of my sayings is “meet the maker, want the watch.” Once I was introduced by California indie enthusiast and dealer Tim Jackson to some of the independent watchmakers I was smitten.

Favorite experiences? Certainly visiting Mr. Dufour at his atelier is a magical occasion for anyone who has had the chance, and workshop visits in general, whether to a place that operates with the surgical precision of Gauthier or Voutilainen or one that somehow creates beauty out of complete squalor like Vianney Halter’s atelier, are always worth the trip.

When it comes to buying from an independent the top experience had to be commissioning with dear friends a set of six Masterpiece Chronographs by Kari Voutilainen. The process took several years, and I know we drove Kari crazy with our requests, but they are the ultimate “buddy watches” and I wouldn’t trade that journey for anything.

 

[KK] While reading your articles, especially your ‘Why I bought it series,’ I always get the impression that you have a thought process or framework that goes into buying a watch. And you try and sell a watch to make way for the new watch. Could you please elaborate a bit on this thought process?

[GG] It’s getting tougher to be thoughtful these days, as appealing watches are often snapped up as soon as – or even before – they are announced! That said, when it comes to considering an individual watch, I think hard about whether it is one of the best of its type, whether it is fully representative of the core skills and values of the brand or maker, whether it is a coherent overall design that meshes aesthetics and mechanics seamlessly, and of course whether there’s a “wow” factor on first impression that persists on second and third viewing.

When it comes to vintage, it’s about a combination of historical importance and my own tastes. I own a Patek Ref. 1526, the first-ever serially produced perpetual calendar wristwatch. It’s a piece that isn’t a darling of collectors, but I think history is on my side and I happen to love the way it looks and wears. The same goes for my Matthey-Tissot Type 20 “big eye” chronograph: people pay a lot more for the Breguet version, but Matthey-Tissot actually made all of the watches and I appreciate that.

At the level of my total assortment, I do try to strike a balance among foundational watches that can be the core of any serious collection, patronage watches that support the independents, and fun watches that simply strike my fancy and that sometimes, but not always, are long-term keepers.

And as you say, I do sell to buy! I wish that I had infinite resources, but no such luck; so, another consideration when I consider buying any piece is asking “what piece in my current set do I love less than this one?” If I can’t answer the question, I usually don’t buy.

 

[KK] You are also a world-class photographer. Your watch photos on your Instagram page are breathtaking. How did the passion for photography come about?

[GG] Thanks very much! Again, the answer is the forums, and PuristS in particular, where there was a common practice of posting what we called “wrist scans” – often literally a scanner shot of someone’s hairy wrist with a watch on it.

I began posting some pretty bad shots but eventually managed to turn things around when a friend introduced me to my teacher Ming Thein, who of course these days has his own watch brand. Ming imparted several of his secrets of product and watch shooting, and I’ve taken tens of thousands of photos since, polishing my approach, and trying new methods and angles to sustain my interest and provide a bit of variety to the kind folks who look at my photos.

 

[KK] What are your thoughts on the current desire for ‘hype watches’? Especially steel sports models from select brands. There is an abundance of liquidity chasing hype watches. And from the supply side there is artificial scarcity, which leads to practices such as bundling, and huge premiums; both at the Authorized Dealers (AD) and Grey Market. We live in a world where even the even the Ming’s and Kurono’s are first-come-first served and highly sought after, and often flipped. What are your thoughts on all this?

[GG] What a mess! This topic is worth a much longer discussion; I’ve written on aspects of it from time to time on Quill & Pad and I’m sure to return to it there sometime soon.

For me, the fundamental driver is that watches have made the transition from being a niche hobby for enthusiasts, to being a mainstream luxury consumer category, with all the good and bad that brings with it.

One result is that status-seeking, low-information buyers are rushing to acquire hype watches and are willing to pay big premiums to have them; the natural knock-on effect is that some brands, retailers and distributors are happy to force bundling, engage in self-dealing between their authorized and secondary market arms, and manipulate supply for some lower-volume brands to pump up the resale values.

What goes up does come down, however; while I’m confident that as with the vintage car boom of the past couple of decades there will be some brands and references whose high recent value endures, we are already seeing softening in demand and resale prices for others.

 

[KK] It seems many collectors today are fearful of walking into an AD and the boutiques of certain brands and asking to try on certain pieces for fear of being laughed at or even ridiculed. Given this, a) How does a collector who does not have a reputation among AD’s and Brands or ‘purchase history’ navigate this terrain? What could he or she buy and not feel ‘left out’? b) What advice would you give to a complete newbie or a novice collector just starting out or wishing to upgrade on his watch collecting journey?

[GG] If you go into an AD or boutique and express genuine interest and enthusiasm and are treated poorly, leave, and don’t go back! I’ve had good luck over the years going into dealers in places where I’m not known and simply engaging the salespeople with questions that make it clear that I’m interested in learning and already know a thing or two – without being condescending or baffling them with trivia. More often than not, the eventual response is the sought-after “I have something in the safe you might like to see…”

The other thing is that there are a lot of brands out there! With the rise of single brand boutiques this is a bit tougher, but if you are at a multi-brand retailer it often works well to say something like “I love the Submariner (or Journe Chronometre Bleu, or Vacheron Overseas) but they are of course really tough to get – what other brands do you have that I might be interested in seeing?” Retail reps spend more time than they’d like saying that no, you can’t have the same watch that the last twenty customers asked for, and most of them will be happy to introduce you to a Parmigiaini or Bulgari or Omega or Hermes that you might just love.

 

[KK] Other than your involvement with the GPHG, Quill & Pad and social media, you do not really occupy a formal position in the industry. But when you speak, write, and post something, I am 100% sure everybody in the collector community, including brand CEO’s and senior leadership, put their pens down, stand to attention and listen to you. I just wanted to say that the presence of Gary Getz on watch forums and social media is a Real Asset to the world of horology. And with this, thanks so much for your valuable time. It has been a real pleasure interviewing you.

[GG] My pleasure entirely! I really respect your openness and enthusiasm and all that you do to promote our hobby and build our community.