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Extreme macro of a vintage Bulova Accutron electronic tuning-fork watch movement with glowing oscillator coils and tiny brass tuning fork, dramatic moody lighting
Accutron

The Tuning Fork Watch: How Bulova's Accutron Hummed Its Way Into History

For four centuries, every watch worth wearing kept time the same way: a spring pushed a wheel, a wheel nudged an escapement, and an escapement let a balance swing back and forth. Tick. Tock. It w...

chronographExtreme macro view of a chronograph column wheel with polished vertical pillars surrounded by finely finished steel levers inside a luxury mechanical movement

The Column Wheel: The Mechanical Conductor Behind the Finest Chronographs

Press the pusher on a fine chronograph and something small happens that you can feel more than see: a crisp, positive click, the second hand leaping to life with zero hesitation. Press it on a le...

Cartier TankVintage rectangular Cartier Tank-style dress watch with white dial, Roman numerals, and blued steel hands on a dark surface

The Cartier Tank: How a WWI Battlefield Inspired the Most Elegant Watch Ever Made

Some watches tell time. A rare few tell a story about design itself. The Cartier Tank is one of those watches — a rectangular sliver of restraint that has outlived the century that created it, an...

balance wheelExtreme macro photograph of a mechanical watch balance wheel oscillating inside a luxury movement with polished steel, brass, and ruby jewel bearings

The Balance Wheel: The Oscillating Heart That Keeps Mechanical Time

Every mechanical watch on your wrist owes its accuracy to a single spinning disc no wider than a shirt button. It swings back and forth several times a second, day and night, for years on end — a...

automatic movementExtreme macro of an exposed automatic winding rotor inside a luxury mechanical watch movement, showing the polished half-moon oscillating weight and Cotes de Geneve finished bridges

The Automatic Rotor: How Your Watch Winds Itself

There is a small piece of metal spinning silently on the back of your mechanical watch right now, harvesting the motion of your wrist and converting a lazy afternoon of typing into stored energy....

Grandeur USAMacro view of a régulateur watch dial with the hours, minutes, and seconds displayed on separate subdials

The Régulateur Dial: Why Watchmakers Separate the Hours, Minutes, and Seconds

Most watch dials are a beautiful compromise. Three hands sweep across a single track, overlapping, crossing, occasionally hiding one another at the top of the hour. We are so used to this arrange...