The Tissot Gentleman gets a more versatile 38mm steel case while keeping the Powermatic 80 movement, 100-meter water resistance and clean everyday styling intact.
Browsing: Watches
Naoya Hida & Co. expands its low-volume catalog for 2026 with 10 models, led by the TYPE7A chronograph, a porcelain-dial TYPE2 and carefully revised versions of its best-known designs.
At the 2026 Met Gala, Omega let vintage Constellation Manhattan watches frame the arrival of the new Constellation Observatory, creating a quieter and more considered red-carpet strategy.
TAG Heuer adds five pastel Formula 1 Solargraph models, including TH-Polylight rubber-strap editions and steel bracelet versions with diamond indexes.
Canadian independent watchmaker Bradley Taylor’s Ardea is a 37.8mm time-only watch with a handmade sterling silver dial, in-house retrograde seconds calibre and a production run limited to 50 pieces.
Limited to 50 pieces in platinum, the latest Lumen combines a stop-seconds tourbillon, instantaneous perpetual calendar and a dramatically luminous semi-transparent dial.
The third Naoya Hida × The Armoury collaboration brings a hand-engraved Argentium silver dial to the compact Type 4A-2, limited to 20 pieces across 2026 and 2027.
The Saxonia Annual Calendar combines Lange’s outsize date, moon phase and self-winding annual calendar in a disciplined 38.5 mm case.
Bulgari adds a platinum tourbillon to its Octo Finissimo Ultra line, pairing the collection’s radical thinness with one of traditional watchmaking’s most demanding complications.
Piaget’s ultra-thin tourbillon concept gains a more decorative face, combining ornamental stone with the Altiplano Ultimate Concept Tourbillon’s remarkable 2 mm profile.
The IWC Ingenieur Perpetual Calendar 41 Ref. IW344904 brings the brand’s crown-operated perpetual calendar into a lighter Grade 5 titanium version with an integrated bracelet and a highly technical sports-watch character.
Water resistance ratings are not literal depth guarantees. Here’s how to read the numbers on your watch, what ISO dive standards actually test, and how to keep water out of the case.
From a logo placed proudly at 12 to short lugs, signed crowns, enamel dials and the occasional tourbillon, these are the small choices that make a watch feel alive.
The long-requested reverse panda Speedmaster arrives as a regular-production Moonwatch, pairing a glossy lacquer dial with the modern Calibre 3861 Master Chronometer movement.
Rotary’s open-worked mechanical watches bring visible gears, balanced proportions and traditional styling into an accessible skeleton-watch format.
With a 41mm steel case, silver dial, automatic movement and brown leather strap, the TAG Heuer Carrera WBN2011.FC6484 shows why a leather-strap watch still works as an everyday luxury choice.
Versace’s watch collection leans into what the Italian fashion house does best: bold Greca details, gold-tone cases, vivid dials and logo-led design with everyday quartz reliability.
From the integrated-bracelet Aikon to the refined Pontos Day Date and elegant Eliros, Maurice Lacroix offers a contemporary route into Swiss watchmaking without leaning on nostalgia alone.
The MING 18.01 H41 DLC is not a conventional dive watch in blackout clothing. It is a serious 1,000-metre instrument filtered through MING’s distinctive language of light, depth and optical tension.
Casio Lab is now live in the United States, and its first proof of concept is wonderfully specific: the SAN100H SADOKEI, a heat-resistant watch built around the ritual of the sauna.




















