Tag: Bovet

Why Are Luxury Watches So Expensive?

A common question among newer watch collectors is, “Why are luxury watches so expensive?” In our modern world of “Fast Fashion,” we can lose sight of why some goods have such jaw-dropping prices associated with them—and balk at who is nutty (or lucky) enough to spend that much on a watch!

Here we break down the three core factors that influence (and ultimately inflate) the cost of a luxury watch.

Luxury watches are made with the finest materials.
From the diamond-covered bezel to the gold watch case to the mother-of-peal dial, watch makers use premier quality materials (both inside and out) to build their luxury watches. In turn, these precious materials are a direct line to a higher price tag. While less-expensive materials could be used (like stainless steel or gold-plated metals), using these fine materials improves the longevity of the piece.

A foundryman alloying gold at Rolex’s foundry.

The materials used to build a watch also become a significant point of distinction for some brands. To wit, Rolex is the sole watch brand to make its own gold; the Swiss watchmaker has gone so far as to run their own gold foundry in order to be the exclusive manufacturer of the gold used for their watch cases and bracelets. They even developed and patented their own shade of rose gold, Everose.

It can take years of research and development to design a watch or watch movement.
Watchmaking is a surprisingly high-stakes game. Given the long history of watches, it can be very difficult for a brand to innovate upon centuries-old technology and watchmakers will constantly challenge themselves to build a watch that is thinner, has more complications, or is even more accurate than its predecessors. It’s a fascinating balance of carrying on and building upon the longstanding tradition of watches.

Brands will invest a significant amount of time and resources to design, test, and perfect their watches before they make their big public debut. (For one example, A. Lange & Sohne spends between three to five years to design a new watch or caliber.) With all that said, designing a new watch or movement takes a very long time and, as the adage goes, time is money which is ultimately reflected in watch’s final price tag.

Luxury watches are usually only available in very limited quantities.
Luxury items—be they watches, handbags, or sports cars—are by definition rare. They’re expensive to produce and their exclusivity heightens their desirability to the elite shopper who can actually afford them. That said, watches aren’t necessarily produced in limited qualities to give the illusion of their rarity.

Many luxury watches are hand-finished so scaling production is simply not an option. (One such brand is Bovet that produces only 2,000 watches a year and it is estimated that in its 180-year history, Patek Philippe has produced less than a million watches.) Moreover, in order to maintain their internal precision and exacting specifications, brands want to have tight control over their manufacturing process which is easier done in smaller quantities. Therefore, these small-run watches earn a higher retail value.

A watchmaker carefully assembling a Girard Perregaux luxury watch (Image courtesy of Girard Perregaux)

Ultimately, all these factors come together to account for the premium value put upon luxury and fine watches and explain why a certain watch is more than another.

One of the most expensive watch brands on the market is Patek Philippe. To learn more about what factors into a Patek Philippe price tag, read our blog post on the topic here!

Bovet 1822 Wins the Prestigious 2018 Aiguille d’Or Award

This past weekend, Pascal Raffy of Bovet received the Aiguille d’Or Award at the Grand Prix d’Horologerie de Geneve awards in Geneva, Switzerland.

The Grand Prix d’Horologerie de Geneve is the most coveted awards in the world of haute horology. Recipients are selected by a jury of the world’s leading watchmakers, journalists, collectors, and retailers. This elite panel scrutinize the nominated watches for how the watchmaker blends together the fine and proud craft of watchmaking with decorative arts. Based upon this core criteria, it’s little surprise that Bovet received the evening’s most prestigious award and grand prize, the Aiguille d’Or, for its standout horological wonder, the Récital 22 Grand Récital.

This jaw-dropping watch features an overhead view of the world, as if you were floating above the brand’s headquarters in Motiers, Switzerland. This elaborate watch also features a flying tourbillon as the sun and a three-dimensional moon that travels around the watch’s globe miniature to display the moon phases. It is a marvelous piece to behold that watch fanatics and causal hobbyists alike can appreciate. The highly elaborate Récital 22 Grand Récital is made up of 705 components and includes a retrograde perpetual calendar (a proprietary design by Bovet) and a patented flying tourbillion complete with a power reserve of over nine days.

As if the mechanics alone were not impressive enough, Bovet’s artisans spent two weeks painstakingly creating the Earth, sun, and moon figures alone, perfecting the finest details like exactly recreating the moon’s topography in this tiny replica.

We congratulate our brand partners at Bovet 1822 on their win of this distinguished award and eagerly await to see how their creative minds could possibly top this fantastic design!

7 Iconic Watches for the Modern Collector

Once you have the big names (think Rolex, Omega, Patek Philippe, and more from our list of 10 essential watches) in your watch collection line-up, grow your collection with some of the most important pieces from today’s new (often independent) watch brands.

Because the independents are typically uninhibited by big corporate politics, they can invest their time and effort into taking creative license in both design and movements. The results are stellar, with many of the young brands (some founded or purchased and re-born just within the past decade or 20 years) introducing cutting-edge and avant-garde luxury watches that most likely will be the next generation of must-have icons for collectors and watch lovers.

7 Iconic Watches for the Modern Collector

Richard Mille RM 11-03 McLaren Automatic Flyback Chronograph

For the gear head who loves incredible precision, fine mechanics, and cutting-edge materials, Richard Mille is a must-own. This brand, which was founded in 1999, is known for its use of high-tech materials and its inventive movements, some complete with tourbillons suspended by cables. Almost any Richard Mille will become iconic, but we love the RM 11-03 McLaren automatic flyback chronograph, inspired by Formula 1 technologies.

HYT H1

HYT is the first to use a watch’s worst enemy — liquid — to display the time. (To wrap your head around this revolutionary and mind-bending technology, read about HYT here.) While there are several great iterations, including the HYT Skull Bad Boy, the 2012 debut model, the HYT H1, outfitted with bellows and capillaries, will most likely be the one to hold its value.

MB&F HM6 Alien Nation

Founded in 2005 and led by watch industry veteran Max Busser, the whimsical brand MB&F’s philosophy is, “A creative adult is a child who survived.” MB&F is all about collaborations with great watchmaking minds and the space-age looking timepieces it creates are not only three-dimensional (meaning the dial has recessed and raised levels to its detail), but also offer unique concepts, like the tiny alien sculptures housed in the HM6 Alien Nation watch, destined for iconic stature.

F.P. Journe Dead Seconds Tourbillon

For those who love absolute classic watchmaking with modern mechanics, look no further than F.P. Journe. Founded in 1999 by master watchmaker and inventor Francois-Paul Journe, F.P. Journe’s watches are a significant but worthwhile investment. Our top pick is the (appropriately named) Dead Seconds Tourbillon, with the “dead seconds function” that ensures the seconds hand will stop on each second indicator for the duration of the second.

Greubel Forsey Double Tourbillon 30° Asymétrique

If you want to own one of the most horologically precise instruments in the world, invest in a Greubel Forsey Double Tourbillon 30° Asymétrique. While co-founders Robert Greubel and Stephen Forsey worked together on inventive concepts for five years, the actual founding of the Greubel Forsey brand wasn’t until 2004. Since then, the brand has created nearly two dozen movements and half a dozen inventions. So advanced is this brand that it is difficult to pick one iconic piece, as most will go down in history as exceptional, but we recommend one of the brand’s earlier developments: the Greubel Forsey Double Tourbillon 30° Asymétrique.

Bovet Amadeo Series

Bovet’s roots date back centuries and the brand was defunct for years before being revived in the late 20th century by Pascal Raffy in 2000. After Raffy took ownership of the brand, Bovet immediately set about taking the world by storm with creative and complex watches that appeal to contemporary collectors with an affinity for timepieces—namely pocket watches—from a bygone era. One key collection is the Amadeo series with patented technology that enables the watch to deftly transform from a wristwatch to a distinctive pocket watch to a bedside clock.

Ressence Type 3
Ressence is an intriguing brand and holds a special fascination among engineering and science lovers. Originally founded in 2010 in Belgium, Ressence’s name is a cross between Renaissance and essence, and the concept behind its designs is unique; the watch features a patented time display that uses graphic elements (including disks and rings) to form the dial. While it looks complex, it is simple to read the time. The one that may reach “Iconic Status” is not the first one, but the Type 3. The watch is one of the first to eliminate the crown. Additionally, while it uses a mechanical ETA movement, the timepiece features two separate sealed chambers, one filled with oil below the dial, and the other containing the base caliber filled with air. No other watch can claim this distinction.

Laurent Ferrier Galet Series
Founded in 2010, by the master watchmaker Laurent Ferrier, the eponymous brand is squarely focused on creating haute-horlogerie timepieces, hand-building a few hundred highly-limited timepieces each year. The timepieces he creates are classically elegant, often incorporating artistic elements. The standout series is the simply beautiful Galet collection. In the Galet, Laurent Ferrier incorporates a Tourbillon Double Hairspring timepiece in a superbly understated package. In fact, if one glances at the watch, its complexity is totally non-existent, as Ferrier eliminates the tourbillon aperture on the dial. The beauty within is not immediately showcased; it is a quiet secret that only the owner knows.