Hublot has just announced its first ever all-sapphire Big Bang Chronograph, with the case middle, bezel and back made of clear sapphire crystal. Here are the details, including the price.
In a preview of what it has in store for Baselworld 2016, Hublot has revealed its first ever chronograph in sapphire crystal. The Big Bang Unico Sapphire is an almost completely transparent watch, with most of the case machined from clear sapphire crystal, with a few components in titanium and clear resin.
Sapphire crystal as used in watchmaking is synthetic, being grown in a laboratory, but has the same properties as natural sapphire. Consequently it is nearly as hard as diamond, rendering the Big Bang Unico Sapphire almost scratch-proof, though fragile as sapphire is prone to chip or crack upon impact.
The Big Bang Unico Sapphire follows in the footsteps of watches from Richard Mille and the very first of them all, the now defunct Alain Silberstein, to feature a transparent sapphire crystal case.
While the bezel, case middle and back are made of clear sapphire, the screws, crown, pushers and other metal parts in the case are made of titanium. The bezel insert that sits between the bezel and case middle, as well as the dial and hands, are made of clear resin. Even the strap is a translucent silicone.
The HUB 1242 Unico movement can be seen from both front and back, with the column wheel for the chronograph visible at six o’clock on the dial. The Unico is Hublot’s workhorse in-house movement that is the base for several complications, including the chronograph found here.
The case diameter is 45 mm, identical to the standard Big Bang, and it is rated to 50 m. The Big Bang Unico Sapphire is a limited edition of 500 pieces. The price is US$57,900 or €57,100.
Parmgiani continued to impress with new in-house movements - including the 70-day power reserve Senfine concept - as well as exceptionally elaborate haute horlogerie complications at SIHH 2016. Here's all you need to know about its new watches, complete with original photography and prices.
Being a vertically integrated and financially independent watchmaker, Parmigiani has the liberty to do what it likes, and the results are usually admirable. True to form Parmigiani’s line-up at SIHH 2016 was heavy on top of the line high complications, but also included two impressive new movements.
Parmigiani’s priciest complications are all finely made, constructed of expensive materials with a visibly high standard of finishing. Their style is conservative, even old fashioned, running counter to the prevailing taste of high rollers in the watch market, whose tastes now lean towards watches from the likes of MB&F and Hublot. Nonetheless Parmigiani’s quality is impeccable. An example is the new Toric Kaleidoscope Prestige is one such complication, a minute repeater with a turbine-like automaton on the dial.
The dial is made of solid gold, with a spiral guilloche on the chapter ring and open-worked in the centre to form a fan-like aperture. Behind this aperture is a mother of pearl disc with a turbine-like motif that spins when the repeater is activated. The movement inside is hand-wound, with twin cathedral gongs unusually shaped like a snake. Being twice as long as the circumference of the movement, the gongs have a chime that lingers. But at 45 mm in diameter, the hefty case is in dense rose gold, which muffles the repeater chime somewhat.
The movement is traditionally laid out, being reminiscent of early 20th minute repeaters, and finely finished. The Toric Kaleidoscope Prestige is a one-off creation with a price tag of SFr495,000. Slightly more affordable is the Toric Quaestor Ripple that’s SFr455,000. Also a unique piece, it features a solid gold dial with a hand-engraved motif that is inspired by the ripples in the pond of a Japanese garden.
This too has a hand-wound movement with cathedral gongs, though the gongs are of the traditional shape.
But this is even larger, at 46 mm in diameter, and in white gold, which results in a soft chime. Nonetheless the movement has a classical design, with a beautifully scalloped bridge for the gear train and exemplary decoration. The Tonda 1950 Tourbillon Galaxy is a variant of the ultra-thin tourbillon Parmigiani launched last year. The cosmic suffix in the name is a reference to the sparkly blue dial, which is made of aventurine, a mineral with metallic inclusions that give it a characteristic glitter.
The case is rose gold, 40.2 mm in diameter and under 9 mm high, making for elegant proportions. The bezel is set with 74 round diamonds. This is limited to five pieces, with a price of SFr145,000. More affordable is the Tonda Metropolitan Selene, a ladies’ wristwatch with a moon phase display that starts at SFr13,000 in stainless steel. This has a mother of pearl dial with an etched lace motif, with gilded hands and hour markers. Inside is a self-winding, in-house movement.
Though just 33.2 mm in diameter, the case feels substantial, being just under 10 mm high with large, flared lugs. It’s available with a blue or white dial, on a leather strap or steel bracelet. With a diamond-set bezel it starts at SFr15,000.
To celebrate its 20th anniversary, Parmigiani also debuted a new movement, the calibre PF361, a hand-wound split-seconds chronograph movement with an oversized date display. It’s found inside the Tonda Chrono Anniversaire, a limited edition of 25 pieces each in white or rose gold, with white or blue enamel dials to match the case.
The movement has all the features of a modern, high-end chronograph calibre, including a column wheel and vertical clutch, and unusually runs at 36,000 beats per hour, a frequency shared by only a few other chronograph movements (most notably the Zenith El Primero). And in the anniversary limited editions has the movement bridges and base plate are in rose gold. The anniversary chronograph costs SFr135,000, but the movement will eventually be found in more affordable watches in a simpler form, and also with the addition of automatic winding. More on this in a future story.
Last is the remarkable Senfine concept movement, a work in progress that features the Genequand escapement – named its inventor, a watchmaker who retired from Parmigiani – a highly efficient set-up that extends the power reserve of an ordinary movement manifold. That explains the senfine moniker, which means “eternally” in Esperanto, the constructed international language that never quite caught on.
The Senfine prototype runs for 70 days, or more than two months. Parmigiani has indicated the movement will be ready for serial production in several months, but as such things go in watchmaking, the reality is likely to be several years.
Stayed tuned for more personal perspectives on the other brands at SIHH 2016 to come over the following days. Links to the rest of our SIHH reports below.
Featuring a dial in glossy black enamel, the new Resilience in red gold is a limited edition of just eight watches. You’ll find specs and the price below.
Named “Resilience” because its vitreous enamel dial is fade resistant and lasts almost forever, the original model bearing that name was fitted with a white enamel dial. Now Speake-Marin has made a small run of Resilience watches with a black enamel dial, a colour scarcely used because of the difficulty in producing it. Being difficult to achieve consistency in colour across a production run, black enamel is uncommon and pricey. The Resilience in black is limited to eight watches in red gold, with a case size of 42 mm. It’s powered by a Vaucher automatic movement, made by the same specialist that supplies Parmigiani, Hermes and Richard Mille.
The black dial has painted markings and numerals in a copper tone to match the case, with the numbers in the same Gothic font as on the new Veshelda Gothic. The Resilience Black Dial is priced at SFr21,900 excluding taxes.