Timex taps 1990s nostalgia with a limited Space Jam Q, while new releases and viewing picks include a Bourdain biopic trailer, Bowers & Wilkins headphones, Bravur’s cycling-era evolution and HBO’s Dean Potter docuseries.
The new Patek Philippe Ref. 6105G-001 brings sunrise and sunset indications to the Celestial family, wrapped in a 47mm white-gold case with a distinctly modern attitude.
Geneva Watch Week left the industry with more than new watches, from Universal Genève’s positioning and Breitling’s group strategy to Minerva’s independence and Corum’s return.
Casio’s GMW-BZ5000 brings a memory-in-pixel display to the full-metal square G-Shock format, adding stronger contrast without turning the formula upside down.
The limited Wild ONE Skeleton X-Lite pushes NORQAIN’s shock-resistant sports watch into ultralight territory with a 45 gram build, a skeletonized automatic calibre and a black-and-yellow case limited to 200 pieces.
Roger Dubuis marks three decades by returning to one of its defining ideas, the biretrograde calendar, across pink gold watches that range from refined day-date to full grand complication.
Hublot revives its Impact idea for 2026 with three limited Spirit of Big Bang models in black ceramic, sapphire, crystallized osmium and diamond-set sapphire.
Baltic and SpaceOne team up on a compact 904L steel watch with jumping hours, a semi-regulator display and hand-finished German silver dial options from €2,500.
JCK 2026 will put greater emphasis on watches through Timepieces at Luxury & JCK, with FHH, AWCI, RedBar and WatchPro helping build a more serious platform for brands, retailers and collectors.
Baltic’s Prismic Stone brings a hand-wound movement, a two-metal case and a fitted Milanese bracelet to the crowded stone-dial dress watch space.
Rolex adds a new 18k gold alloy to the Day-Date 40, pairing pale Jubilee gold with a green aventurine dial and baguette diamond hour markers.
The United States remains the watch industry’s most valuable luxury market, but success here requires more than product supply and prestige.
The Atelier Loreti Celestial Tourbillon brings a functioning automatic tourbillon, stone dials and 100 meters of water resistance into a price range that would have seemed unlikely not long ago.
Jaeger-LeCoultre refreshes the core Reverso line for 2026 with compact Classic Small models, a diamond-set Origin, and a new medium-sized Tribute Duoface Small Seconds.
Cartier’s platinum Privé Crash Squelette turns the brand’s most surreal case shape into an openworked mechanical sculpture, limited to 150 pieces.
The returning Oris Artelier Complication revives one of the brand’s most approachable multi-function dress watches, pairing a moon-phase display with a practical second time zone.
The updated Oris Artelier Date moves into a slimmer 38mm case with textured dials, a cleaner contemporary look and the automatic Oris 733 calibre.
The Giorgio Galli S2Ti takes Timex into more serious territory with a Swiss automatic movement, a full titanium construction and one of the smartest bracelets in its price range.
Bravur’s latest Grand Tour chronograph channels cycling’s sprint stages with a green-and-purple dial, flamme rouge details and a Sellita SW511 b automatic movement.
AXIA brings wristwatches into the FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Licensed Products program with country-themed Argos, Enosi and Kosmos models.




















