What (s) show (s) carries a éconologue?
published: 17/06/15, 19:39
Hello,
Everything is in the title !
Are there any watch enthusiasts among us?
Attention, a watch does not have to be expensive to be interesting, sometimes it is sentimental (birthday gift, wedding gift) or it can be the "bookmark" of a professional turning point, etc, etc ...
In short, a watch is not necessarily only used to tell the time ...
It is clear that as a watch fanatic, my preference goes to automatic ones because these watches are "alive", they draw their energy from the movements of the wrist. There is something for all budgets, all tastes, and with all the complications you want.
In short, two or three photos of a small part of my watches:
The one currently occupying my wrist, a Tag Heuer caliber 16 Day & Date, from 2014:
An Oris Big Crown Regulator (the three needles each have their axis) It is from 2001, I bought it when I started cleaning with the one who was going to become my wife (and who is still)
A Rado DiaStar, here next to my current Tag, is a reissue from the 2000s of a mythical model from the end of the '60s to the' 70s that was the first scratch-resistant watch in the world. My father gave it to me at the end of my compulsory schooling, it had very great sentimental value, but I was robbed of it during a burglary when I was working in Paris. That's why I jumped on this reissue:
I still have a few others, but I'm going to stop there for wristwatches, and I'll put two or three photos of pocket watches:
Old and very rare:
Another, a little less old, but just as rare:
Well, I will stop there for the moment, but you econologist friends, what do you have on your wrist?
A+
Everything is in the title !
Are there any watch enthusiasts among us?
Attention, a watch does not have to be expensive to be interesting, sometimes it is sentimental (birthday gift, wedding gift) or it can be the "bookmark" of a professional turning point, etc, etc ...
In short, a watch is not necessarily only used to tell the time ...
It is clear that as a watch fanatic, my preference goes to automatic ones because these watches are "alive", they draw their energy from the movements of the wrist. There is something for all budgets, all tastes, and with all the complications you want.
In short, two or three photos of a small part of my watches:
The one currently occupying my wrist, a Tag Heuer caliber 16 Day & Date, from 2014:
An Oris Big Crown Regulator (the three needles each have their axis) It is from 2001, I bought it when I started cleaning with the one who was going to become my wife (and who is still)
A Rado DiaStar, here next to my current Tag, is a reissue from the 2000s of a mythical model from the end of the '60s to the' 70s that was the first scratch-resistant watch in the world. My father gave it to me at the end of my compulsory schooling, it had very great sentimental value, but I was robbed of it during a burglary when I was working in Paris. That's why I jumped on this reissue:
I still have a few others, but I'm going to stop there for wristwatches, and I'll put two or three photos of pocket watches:
Old and very rare:
Another, a little less old, but just as rare:
Well, I will stop there for the moment, but you econologist friends, what do you have on your wrist?
A+