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Being from your granddad, I'd say that puts it's value in the irreplaceable range. Very cool Giftmacher.
Agreed!
Being from your granddad, I'd say that puts it's value in the irreplaceable range. Very cool Giftmacher.
Seb, what are you after?
The "1920s Swiss Military Watch" is indeed from the late 1910s to the early 1920s. The style is called a round cushion. It is not a military watch, but has a military connection.
In the early 1910s, a man showing up wearing a wristwatch might as well show up wearing a dress. Wristwatches were for women in the US, but were more accepted in Europe. When our boys went to France to fight in WWI, they learned that a wristwatch, or at least a pocket watch strapped to the wrist was much more convenient and safer (from sniper fire) in the trenches. So they came how from the war with wristwatches and safety razors.
So following the war it was acceptable for a man to wear a wristwatch if he was a veteran, and/or involved in a sport, or driving a race car, or flying a plane or some similar activity. In the evening, he should return to his pocket watch.
Still the popularity of the pocket watch among the young took off like the smart phone. By 1928, the wristwatch outsold the pocket watch in the US.
Take a look at http://beckertime.com/blog/short-history-of-womens-wrist-watches/ where I quote
“… after the end of World War I, a lawyer was arguing a point of law in court when Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis noticed that the lawyer was wearing a wristwatch. The judge halted the lawyer in mid-sentence and asked him if he served in the war. When the lawyer responded he had not, Judge Landis ordered him to remove the watch, admonishing him that it was inappropriate for non-veterans to wear a wristwatch. Judge Landis was subsequently appointed the commissioner of Major League Baseball to clean up the sport’s image after the “Black Sox World Series” scandal in 1919. This involved “Shoeless” Joe Jackson of the Chicago White Sox and seven of his teammates. Landis ruled baseball with an iron fist from Nov. 12, 1920 to Nov. 25, 1944.”
In 1928 that same Judge awarded the World Series champions, New York Yankees, Hamilton Piping Rock wristwatches.
Don
I love the stained glass hands on that watch. It looks sort of like a Tiffany lamp.
1950 to 1970 - Omega, Cyma, Doxa, Longines, whatever... I know the famous city and Armadale dealers.
Try Camberwell Market. I have heard of some good scores there. Alternatively, eBay.
I got a great watch at Camberwell. The pride of my tiny collection. But you really have to be sharp-eyed, smart, and keep your mouth shut when you look for them.
I don't doubt it but I've only ever seen **** there.
I don't doubt it but I've only ever seen **** there.
Like a good tailor, building a relationship with a good watchmaker can take time and patience.
My watchmaker sells at Camberwell sometimes but mostly old tat. Get to know him and he'll offer you some interesting stuff - but it won't be cheap.
Savour the hunt, have patience, and avoid asking for specific brands unless you are knowledgable on the brand.
Good luck
I've never been to tailor but I think I follow - problem is I'm not a patient guy; I want to walk into a place see a selection, choose and buy. Thanks for the advice.
^ Fantastic story and very cool looking watch. Argues that even the "cheap" goods of yore were better made than many not-cheap goods today.
I never go to that place, Talbot. Too damn expensive.