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Courtesy of Vacheron Constantin |
Okay.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, it's hard not be romantic about watches.
This is Vacheron Constantin's contribution to Only Watch, and YES - I WANT IT!
Patrimony Traditionnelle World Time for Only Watch
2013
Enhanced reading of all the world’s time zones
The Patrimony Traditionnelle World Time is a unique model specially
created for the Only Watch 2013 event and representing a combined expression of
the exclusive skills cultivated by Vacheron Constantin. The dial paying tribute
to three artistic crafts – engraving, enamelling and gem-setting – illustrates
the aesthetic mastery dear to the Manufacture, while the World Time
complication embodies the technical excellence and open-minded spirit that have
been guiding the brand for over 250 years.
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Courtesy of Vacheron and Constantin |
Inseparably bound up with the Vacheron Constantin
heritage, the World Time complication had made a major comeback in the
collection of the Manufacture in 2011 with the Patrimony Traditionnelle World
Time model driven by a new in-house made movement, Calibre 2460 WT.
It now returns as the Patrimony Traditionnelle World
Time “Only Watch” model available in a 42.5 mm-diameter 950 platinum case
featuring an exhibition case and water-resistant to 3 bar (around 30 metres).
It is supplied with a saddle-stitched black alligator leather strap secured by
a folding clasp.
The back of this timepiece is engraved with the
inscription “Only Watch 2013, Pièce unique”, commemorating the Only Watch event
organised by the Monaco Association against Muscular Dystrophy, a charity with
which Vacheron Constantin is once again privileged to associate this year.
Building on its
historical expertise in the realm of Artistic Crafts, Vacheron Constantin has
called upon the most sophisticated current talents to give this timepiece a
face combining ultimate artistic precision with contemporary elegance. The
central gold associates a trilogy of excellence in the techniques of engraving,
enamelling and gem-setting. The hand-engraved seas and the countries are coated
with translucent and opalescent enamel, while the GMT reference city, Monaco,
is immortalised by a round-cut diamond that is extremely difficult to set
because of the extremely thin plate. Independent enamelling artist Anita
Porchet, who is well known to collectors and connoisseurs of horological works
of art, contributed her peerless skill to the successful crafting of this
timepiece.
The World Time
watch embodies the openness to the world characterising the Manufacture founded
in 1755. For over 250 years, Vacheron Constantin has been crossing borders to
spread the news of its precious timepieces. It has been active in the United
States since 1832 and in China since 1845, well before the International
Meridian Conference held in Washington in 1884 and which divided the world into
24 time zones while defining the zero meridian.
In 1932, Vacheron
Constantin introduced an original watch featuring a world time mechanism. It
marked the first chapter in a long story of developments of the world time
complication, sometimes also referred to as universal time or international
time.
Eager to make a
major new contribution to the history of this complication, the
master-watchmakers and engineers of the Manufacture sought to create a
mechanical movement capable not only of indicating full time zones, but also
partial time zones, so as to reflect the precise temporal reality prevailing in
37 different zones of the world. This is because a number of countries have
adopted a time that is a half-hour or a quarter-hour out of sync with UTC
(Universal Coordinated Time). Calibre 2460 WT was specially developed and
produced by Vacheron Constantin to take account of these special cases. This
timepiece bears the prestigious Poinçon de Genève (Hallmark of Geneva), confirming
the status of the Patrimony Traditionnelle World Time as a truly precious
accessory for today’s keen travellers.
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Courtesy of Vacheron Constantin |
While complex in
terms of its technical design, this mechanical movement beating at a frequency
of 4 Hz (28,800 vibrations/hour) and endowed with an approximately 40-hour time
zone, remains pleasantly simple to use, even through the 38 time-zone
indication is as complete as they come. All adjustments are made via the crown
of the watch – an exceptional feature on a multiple time-zone watch. The owner
of the timepiece chooses the reference city by placing it facing the red
triangle at 6 o’clock. The time in the reference location may thus be read off
either via the hours hand of the watch, or on the 24-hour disc. The time in any
of the 36 other time zones may be read off simultaneously. The cities appearing
in black represent the complete time zones, while the grey cities indicate
half-hour or quarter-hour time zones. The day/night indication is symbolised by
the 24-hour disc, with the night shown in red and the day in white.
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