Round-UpThe Finest New Timepieces From Watches And Wonders Geneva 2025
The biggest watch fair of the year, the biggest playground in the world of horology, Watches and Wonders Geneva 2025 is here, and we’re bringing you the finest new novelties being unveiled at the event
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Alpina Heritage Tropic-Proof Handwinding
The first re-release of Alpina’s historic 1965 model, the new Tropic-Proof Handwinding comes with two dial options, black or white—just like the original. In addition, it features a 34mm stainless steel case, Dauphine hands, Alcantara strap, and a manual winding movement, making it an honest reissue of the 1965 model. Atop sits a new, non-reflective sapphire crystal in place of resin, still maintaining its distinctive ‘glassbox’ shape that curves down toward the bezel, ensuring visibility from every angle. The Dauphine hands feature a luminous coating instead of the original tritium, while the hour markers are similar to the original model, including the double markers at three, six, nine, and 12 o’clock. It is powered by the AL-480 calibre—hand-wound, just as in the original, offering a 42-hour power reserve, and comes with a beige Alcantara pin buckle strap, with complementing topstitching.

Angelus Chronographe Télémètre
Angelus have unveiled the Chronographe Télémètre at Watches and Wonders Geneva 2025, showcasing their commitment to traditional mechanical watchmaking. This 37mm timepiece joins the La Fabrique collection as a tribute to the brand’s chronograph heritage dating back to 1891. Powered by the in-house hand-wound A5000 calibre with column-wheel chronograph, the watch features distinctive two-tone finishing and offers a 42-hour power reserve. Available in stainless steel or 18-karat yellow gold with three dial options, production is limited to just 25 pieces per steel variant and 15 for the gold model. With its telemeter scale and classic proportions, this release firmly targets collectors who value historical authenticity over modern sizing trends.

Armin Strom Dual Time GMT Resonance-Manufacture Edition Black
Armin Strom presented the Dual Time GMT Resonance-Manufacture Edition Black, showcasing a monochromatic aesthetic in a 39mm stainless steel case paired with a glossy taupe alligator strap. At the heart of this timepiece beats the ARF22 calibre—the brand’s 18th in-house movement—distinguished by its dual balance wheels that oscillate in perfect resonance. A patented clutch mechanism ensures this synchronisation remains stable even against everyday shocks. Comprising 231 meticulously crafted components, the movement operates at 3.5Hz with a 42-hour power reserve. The GMT function offers two independent displays with day or night indicators and fractional hour offset capability, making it particularly versatile for travellers.

Arnold & Son Constant Force Tourbillon 11
Besides being a tribute to 260 years of English watchmaker John Arnold’s legacy, the Arnold & Son Constant Force Tourbillon 11 timepiece, released at Watches and Wonders 2025 in Geneva, tells the story of one of the greatest bonds in horology. A 41.5mm 18 karat gold case matches the constant force mechanism displayed against a white grand feu enamel dial. Here, a contrasting blued anchor serves as the ‘dead-beat’ seconds hand, as a nod to marine chronometers. On the left of the dial is a concave, opaline, timekeeping sub-dial with Roman numerals and blued hands. The magic of the watch, however, is displayed on the caseback. Designed to evoke the architecture of Abraham Louis Breguet’s tribute to John Arnold, presented to his son in 1808, the caseback reveals an inscription on a silver plate with a refined tourbillon displayed at six o’clock. The manual-winding calibre A&S5219 is driven by two barrels mounted in series, offering a power reserve of 100 hours. Although the Arnold & Son Constant Force Tourbillon 11 puts precision first, the watch is also a tribute to the forces that inspired watchmakers.

Baume & Mercier Riviera M0A10828
The Baume & Mercier Riviera M0A10828 timepiece is a 73-piece limited-run edition (the number pays tribute to the launch year of the Riviera collection, 1973). Its main highlight is the flyback function that can stop, reset, restart the chronograph at a simple press of a second identical push button at four o’clock, as well as its telemeter and tachymeter. It also complements the indication of hours, minutes, small seconds, and date. Its 41mm polished and satin-finished stainless steel dodecagonal case cradles a luminous vertically brushed gold dial. Two scratch-resistant anti-glare sapphire crystals protect the watch, one atop the twelve-sided stainless steel bezel and the other on the caseback. The faceted, rhodium-plated hour and minute hands, coated with beige Super-LumiNova (blue glow), contrast with the blued steel chronograph seconds hand, which bears the Phi logo as a counterweight, and with the polished blued steel hands of the counters. Its in-house produced self-winding movement offers 42-hour power reserve and oscillates at a frequency of 28,800vph.

Bell & Ross BR-03 Skeleton
The Bell & Ross BR-03 Skeleton Lum Ceramic is the latest reinterpretation of the brand’s iconic square watch. It features the in-house BR-CAL.328 skeletonised movement with a 54-hour power reserve. The Lum Ceramic delivers a sci-fi-inspired luminous design with its futuristic, sci-fi look elevated by a neon-like photoluminescent effect for the open-worked dial. This watch face is cut to follow the contours of the movement’s bridges, revealing the blackened gears through the tinted sapphire crystal. A green Super-LumiNova outline accentuates the cutouts, bringing quickly to mind an illuminated car grille. The Bell & Ross BR-03 Skeleton Lum Ceramic is housed in a micro-blasted black ceramic case. While its water-resistant up to 100m, this 41mm open-worked watch can either be paired with a black rubber strap or a black synthetic fabric strap. This Lum Ceramic is limited to 250 pieces.

Bremont Altitude MB Meteor
The British maison’s iconic collaboration with Martin-Baker began in 2007, with watches designed to withstand the same rigorous testing programme as the ejection seats themselves. The latest addition to this partnership is the Altitude MB Meteor, inspired by the Gloster Meteor—Britain’s first jet fighter, which also featured in Martin-Baker’s original live ejection test in 1946. Distinctive for its one of the most recognisable seconds hand, counterbalanced by a loop depicting the pull-handle of an ejector seat, it is housed in a 42mm Grade-2 titanium case with the Trip-Tick construction, featuring a knurled titanium central barrel coated in a black ceramic-based layer for enhanced durability. The watch wraps around the wrist with a Grade-2 brushed titanium quick-release bracelet, a black rubber and leather strap, or a black NATO strap. It has two crowns: the two o’clock crown for setting the time and winding the movement, and the four o’clock crown for operating the bi-directional inner rotating rehaut. It is powered by the automatic Calibre BB14-AH, based on the La Joux-Perret SA G100 movement, with a 68-hour power reserve.

Bulgari Octo Finissimo Ultra Tourbillon
First-time exhibitors at Watches and Wonders this year, Bulgari have set another record with their latest Octo Finissimo Ultra Tourbillon. The ‘world’s thinnest flying tourbillon’ is now just 1.85mm thick. This comes just over 10 years after their previous record holder, the Octo Finissimo Tourbillon displayed a thickness of 1.95mm. Powered by the brand’s new manual-winding BVF 900 tourbillon calibre, the watch offers a power reserve of 42 hours. Hours and minutes are displayed on a skeletonised sub-dial between 12 and three o’clock on the dial, while an open-worked tourbillon sits within its ultra-flat cage between three and six. The mainplate is crafted from tungsten carbide, while planar crowns at eight and three o’clock, and the engraved ratchet wheel are made from steel. The 40mm microbead-frosted titanium case and lugs are complemented by an integrated titanium strap. These materials and their superb finishes cohesively come together in a monochromatic timepiece worthy of all the records that came before, and those that will undoubtedly follow.

Chronoswiss Q-Repeater Scream And Q-Repeater Blue Note
Unlike any other minute repeater out there, the Chronoswiss Q-Repeater Scream and Q-Repeater Blue Note watches take the complication to a concert level. At the push of a button at 10 o’clock on the case, the Q-Repeater timepieces don’t just chime a melodious tune. The Q-Repeater Scream releases a mechanical rock concert, while the Q-Repeater Blue Note presents a symphony of jazz and blues. When activated, hammer and gongs can be seen at one o’clock on the dial of the Scream watch, even as psychedelic hued bridges and a green Paraiba guilloche base serve as the stage for the rock concert. Metallic blue bridges and guilloche base on the Blue Note watch fit the mood of a jazz and blues concert. All this is made possible by the brand’s legacy movement which has been updated to fit the brand’s ‘modern mechanical’ appeal. Housed in a 42mm titanium case, the C.126 automatic calibre can also be viewed from the display caseback.
Czapek Antarctique Flying Tourbillon
Czapek & Cie enter their tenth year as an independent revival brand this year. To showcase their growing boldness and avant garde approach to watchmaking, the brand present the Antarctique Flying Tourbillon at Watches and Wonders 2025. A hand guilloche dial in a whirlpool like pattern displays a tourbillon at six, a central gear train and a barrel at 12 o’clock. Colour options include an icy ‘glacier blue’, sand coloured ‘photon sphere’ and a grey ’secret alloy’, the last one limited to 50 pieces only. On the dial, connecting the three o’clock index with nine is a long, slim, hollowed out bridge that serves to balance the open-worked vertical axis of the dial. The exhibition caseback displays the curved 5N gold rotor of the brand’s new calibre 9, with a 72-hour power reserve. Hand engraved to resemble the pattern on the dial, the rotor stands out against the darkened components of the movement.

Frederique Constant Classic Perpetual Calendar Manufacture
Housed in a 40mm steel case, the Frederique Constant Classic Perpetual Calendar Manufacture retains the brand’s commitment to offering affordable Swiss fine watchmaking. The new dial, in a popular salmon hue, enhances the watch’s vintage-inspired appeal, with slender Dauphine hands and a sector dial minute track. The minimalist face highlights three perpetual calendar displays: months and leap years at 12 o’clock, days at nine o’clock, and the date at three o’clock, with a Moon Phase window at six o’clock. This variant is powered by the new FC-776 calibre, Frederique Constant’s 34th in-house movement, offering a three-day power reserve. It operates at 4Hz, with each watch adjusted and tested in six positions for exceptional accuracy. The FC-776 shares components with the proven FC-775 calibre, ensuring reliability. This sophisticated perpetual calendar maintains Frederique Constant’s legacy of blending luxury with accessibility, providing an elegant and functional timepiece for collectors.

Geral Charles Maestro GC39 25th Anniversary Edition
The Maestro GC39 25th Anniversary Edition stands as the centrepiece of Gerald Charles’ Watches and Wonders presentation. This commemorative timepiece revisits Genta’s original GC39 design from 2005, reimagining its “window watch” concept with modern execution. Where the original featured a sliding-hour complication, this anniversary model employs a jumping-hour mechanism powered by Gerald Charles’ new Swiss Manufacture 4.0 calibre. Developed and patented in-house, this movement requires an additional 80 components whilst maintaining a 50-hour power reserve. The skeletonised central hour hand comes finished in blue, allowing light to pass through and reflect off its surface.
The dial employs Gerald Charles’ proprietary meta-guilloché process—a complex method involving multiple engravings and protective coatings that reveals a hidden star motif when catching the light. A silver outer edge frames a section of blue lapis lazuli, nodding to Genta’s fondness for the stone. Despite housing its jumping-hour complication, the 42mm square titanium case remains a svelte 11mm thick. Production is limited to 100 pieces, with 40 available for immediate delivery.

H. Moser & Cie. Endeavour Centre Seconds Concept Purple Enamel
Intricate decoration and minimalism rarely go hand-in-hand, but it’s an art that H. Moser & Cie. have presented more than just a couple of times. In their new novelty for Watches and Wonders, they present the combination again, with the art of grand feu enamelling on a dial that has a white gold base that is engraved for a hammered effect. Pigments in various shades of purple are laid out extremely carefully and then fired several times, very carefully by skilful enamellers, to ensure that no pixelation occurs, and that the fumé dial has an even gradient. There isn’t anywhere to hide really since it’s a Concept dial with no markers, and only three-hand timekeeping, which runs on H. Moser’s three-day automatic calibre HMC 201. The gold rotor, grey anthracite finishing and Moser double stripes can be seen through the exhibition caseback of the 40mm steel case. Complementing the ‘purple haze’ dial is a purple kudu leather strap.
Hautlence Linear Series 3
With their Linear Series 3 watch, Hautlence seem to actively move from a black-and-white age to a coloured era. Inspired by a vintage television set, the case measures 50.8mm by 43mm, with a bevelled sapphire crystal glass that gives it a height of 12.2mm. Hours on the left of the dial evoke precision instruments, or the control panel on a CRT television. When the twelvth hour is though, the white pointer jumps back to the first position on the top left corner of the dial. Majority of the dial, though, is used to display the minute track. Like the linear jumping hours on the left, here too, numerals are treated with Globolight to aid better legibility in dim lighting. Part of the movement is visible behind the minute track such as the snail disengaging after the 12th hour. At six o’clock is a flying tourbillon, which enhances both accuracy and aesthetics of the Hautlence Linear Series 3 watch.
Hublot Big Bang Tourbillon Automatic Sapphire
Among Hublot’s 20th anniversary releases, the Big Bang Tourbillon Automatic Sapphire stands out for its technical complexity. Crafting an entire case from sapphire crystal remains one of watchmaking’s most difficult feats, requiring specialised tools and expertise few brands possess. The transparent 44mm housing reveals the HUB6035 automatic tourbillon movement in its entirety, with a 22-karat white gold micro-rotor featuring a ’20 YEARS’ skeleton design. The calibre offers approximately 72 hours of power reserve and comprises 293 components, including 26 jewels. The movement beats at 21,600vph and is adorned with transparent sapphire bridges. Part of the million-franc ‘Materials and High Complications’ unique set, this watch represents what Hublot does best: combining traditional complications with material innovation.

IWC Ingenieur Ceramic
The most striking of IWC’s novelties at Watches and Wonders this year is their new ceramic edition of the Ingenieur. It’s a fitting material for IWC, as they were the pioneers of the use of ceramic in watchmaking. And as an integrated sport timepiece, it’s best that this ceramic edition is a time-only watch. At 42mm, the black ceramic case is complemented by a dial in black, featuring the pattern that makes the Ingenieur even more distinctive. White markings, including the date on a black base, present sharp contrast. Powering this watch is the IWC automatic 60-day calibre 82110, which can be seen through the tinted sapphire crystal on the caseback. This and the sapphire crystal glass are pressed directly into the ceramic.
Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso Tribute
The latest Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso Tribute series draws inspiration from the Shahnameh, an ancient Persian epic poem, creating a watch inspired by Persian artistry. Four unique versions in this series narrate legendary tales—Siyavush’s polo match, Faridun’s son test, Saam’s mountain journey, and Rustam’s great battle. Each timepiece is crafted in 18-karat white gold, featuring intricate guilloche patterns and grand feu enamel on the dial and caseback. Powered by the manually-wound Calibre 822 movement, these watches achieve a 42-hour power reserve. Limited to just 10 pieces each, all Reverso Tribute Enamel ‘Shahnameh’ timepieces come paired with a black alligator leather strap having an interchangeable double folding clasp.
Laurent Ferrier Classic Auto Horizon
Laurent Ferrier explore new horizons this year with the new Classic Auto Horizon. Preceded by the Série Atelier edition Classic Auto Sandstone in 2022, the Classic Auto Horizon is part of the maison‘s permanent collection. It is powered by the brilliant and beautiful self-winding Calibre LF270.01 that takes over 139 manual finishing operations. Wound by a platinum micro rotor, the movement offers an impressive power reserve of 72 hours. It is housed in the brand’s signature pebble-shaped case inspired by the 19th century pocket watches and features the all-new horizon blue dial inspired by nature.
Louis Moinet Impulsion Titanium Onyx
The Louis Moinet Impulsion Titanium Onyx—a Grade 5 titanium limited-edition watch—showcases exquisite three-dimensional architecture of its mechanisms, courtesy the work of Louis Moinet and their partner Concepto—a specialist in decorated movements. This limited edition of just 12 pieces is the first-ever Louis Moinet Impulsion created entirely in titanium. The Impulsion Titanium Onyx is powered by a manual-winding in-house Memoris calibre that enables functions like hours, minutes, and seconds, along with chronograph functions like central seconds and 30-minute counter. The 42.5mm Grade 5 titanium case houses the onyx dial, which decorates the inserts and the disk at the back of the tourbillon cage. This look is completed by a black alligator leather strap secured to a folding clasp.

MeisterSinger X Alain Silberstein
For the first time, MeisterSinger partners with the legendary French architect and designer Alain Silberstein to create a pair of limited-edition timepieces, infused with both the brand’s distinct design philosophies. Silberstein, known for his bold, Bauhaus-inspired creations, infuses his characteristic playfulness into the new MeisterSinger X Alain Silberstein Kaenos Grand Date. Silberstein’s bold, colourful design elements, including a red arrow hour hand and golden accents, infuse playfulness into MeisterSinger’s minimalist style. Limited to 225 pieces each, these timepieces are a fusion of creativity and precision, celebrating both brands’ design philosophies. The iconic single hour hand is transformed into a dominant, expressive red arrow, while a golden second hand—an unusual but intriguing addition for a MeisterSinger watch—adds movement to the dial. Other standout features include golden hour markers at key positions and subtle dot markers replacing the traditional quarter-hour indices.

Nomos Glashütte Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer Blue
The German watchmaker Nomos Glashütte have introduced a worldtime function in their Club Sport neomatik series for the first time. Released in two standard versions—one with a deep blue dial featuring a sunburst finish and the other in silver with a rhodium-plated dial, also with a sunburst finish, and a day-night display in red and blue—it seamlessly combines the robustness of a Club Sport with worldtime functionality. Encased in a 40mm steel case, it measures just 9.9mm in height and 48mm in length. Its screw-down crown at three o’clock ensures water resistance of up to 100m. The blue version features a galvanised dial with lume-filled hour numerals and indices. It also includes a 24-hour home time sub-dial, a day-night display at three o’clock, a small seconds counter at six o’clock, and a city ring with a red indicator on the periphery. Powered by the automatic DUW 3202 calibre, the watch offers a respectable 42-hour power reserve and is presented on an integrated steel bracelet.

Norqain Wild ONE Skeleton 39mm Limited Edition Mint
The independent Swiss brand have expanded their Wild ONE Skeleton series, with the introduction of a new timepiece in a reduced case size of 39mm. Showcased here is their Limited Edition Mint watch (400 pieces only), featuring the brand’s innovative carbon material Norteq, making it ultra-light, robust, and shock-resistant. It weighs just 64gms, yet delivering a shock resistance of up to 5000g. Measuring 39mm in diameter, with a thickness of 11.75mm and a lug-to-lug length of 45.75mm, it features a 25-part case construction, with a black Norteq cage. Its skeletonised hands and indices are filled with Super-LumiNova in the same colour scheme as the watch, while the central seconds hand features white lume. Powered by Norqain’s Calibre N08S, it can run uninterrupted for 41 hours. It features the marking ‘Limited Edition, ONE of 400’ on its sapphire caseback, and is presented on an animal cruelty-free, Milanese-style patterned rubber strap in mint, with black borders.
Oris Big Crown Pointer Date
Oris have slowly been updating their 80-something year old Big Crown Pointer Date collection for a while. They have made the loudest and most colourful splash with the latest releases presented at Watches and Wonders 2025. In new dial hues of yellow, turquoise blue and lilac, and paired with a new steel bracelet, the Oris Big Crown Pointer Date almost seems like a new collection altogether. Even the Big Crown Pointer Date Calibre 403 models now feature two new dial hues of green and terracotta. Interestingly, the arrowhead on the date pointer is in hues that match the dial. By changing the colour of the pointer from red, the date indicator sits quietly on the dial, present should the wearer want to check the date, but not obscuring the new shaded dials in any way. Powered by the Oris 754 calibre or the brand’s updated calibre 403, the watches are a contemporary take on the maison’s successful aviation collection.

Panerai Submersible QuarantaQuattro Mike Horn Edition PAM01676
The Panerai Submersible QuarantaQuattro Mike Horn Edition PAM01676 features a 44mm brushed steel case. It cradles a blue vertically brushed dial and a unidirectional rotating steel bezel with a polished blue ceramic disk, ensuring higher resistance to corrosion. The rubberized blue crown prioritizes providing good grip, even in slippery conditions. The brushed finish of the case contrasts with the polished bezel and applied indices. The closed case back is engraved with Mike Horn’s signature. The dial features large luminescent hour markers and hands for improved visibility in low-light conditions, while the big indexes are designed for enhanced readability. These indexes are wider by 20percent in diameter with an expanded Super-LumiNova® X1 surface area by 45percent for increased luminescence. A small seconds sub-dial is positioned at nine o’clock, distinguished by a yellow hand that stands out for easy reading.

Parmigiani Tonda PF Skeleton Stainless Steel Slate Green
The Parmigiani Tonda PF Skeleton Stainless Steel Slate Green is a 50-piece limited edition housed in a 40mm steel case with a 950-platinum knurled bezel. The case is only 8.5mm thick, offering a slim profile despite housing a complex automatic movement. Both the front and back use anti-reflective sapphire crystals, with the caseback showing engraved details and offering a glimpse into the movement. Its open-worked dial reveals the tastefully finished movement, with its components coming to life through satin-brushed bridges and a skeletonised white gold oscillating weight. With suspended indexes and 18-karat gold rhodium-plated skeletonised Delta-shaped hands, the complex watch face becomes easy to read. Driving this open-worked watch is the skeletonised PF777 calibre, an automatic, high-frequency movement beating at 28,800vph and delivering a 60-hour power reserve. The Tonda PF Skeleton Slate Green is offered on a polished and satin-finished stainless steel bracelet.

Perrelet Turbine Chrono Neo
Perrelet have unveiled a new chronograph watch, the Turbine Chrono Neo, at Watches and Wonders 2025. This new-generation chrono watch features a 42mm case crafted from polished and brushed Grade 2 titanium, a departure from the larger 47mm diameter of its predecessor. The reduced diameter provides a more comfortable fit on the wrist. The dial’s standout feature is Perrelet’s signature 12-blade turbine, which rotates to reveal colour accents in three options-blue, green, and grey. Its functionality is enhanced with a central chronograph minute hand, luminous hour markers, and a date display at six o’clock. Powering the watch is Perrelet’s high-frequency automatic P-361 movement, offering a 42-hour power reserve and Incabloc shock protection. Strap options include a matching titanium bracelet or a rubber strap in a matching sub-dial colour. This new addition to the Turbine collection is equipped with a central 60-second hand, a central 60-minute hand with a triangular tip, and a minutes flange.

Raymond Weil Freelancer Complete Calendar
The Freelancer Complete Calendar by Raymond Weil is available in two classic-hued dial variants: stainless steel with a matching bracelet or a rose gold PVD-coated model with a brown calfskin strap. These watches feature a 40mm round case, rife with a mix of bright polished and brushed finishes throughout the length of the case, middle and stepped tapered lugs. While the steel case encircles the blue dial, the rose gold PVD does the same with a dune dial. A piece of interesting trivia: The moon shown against a starry night sky in the lunar sub-dial at six o’clock is an actual reproduction of a NASA image. An instant attention grabber are two large bevelled rectangular windows under 12 o’clock that display the day and month, outlined by thick ring indicating the date. The Complete Calendar is powered by the in-house manufactured automatic calibre RW3281—a Sellita SW 300-1 base with a calendar module. When fully wound, the movement delivers a 56-hour power reserve.

Ressence Type 7 XV Aquamarine
Ressence unveiled the Type 7 at Watches and Wonders Geneva 2025, crafted from Grade 5 titanium. The 41mm case is paired with a matching bracelet and houses the brand’s signature oil-filled dial for superior legibility. One of the new Type 7 watches is the limited-edition XV Aquamarine, which celebrates Ressence’s 15 years of watchmaking. A first for the brand, the TYPE 7 introduces a GMT function. The integrated titanium bracelet also provides exceptional comfort. Powering the watch is the patented ROCS 7 movement, which uses a magnetic transmission system for fluid timekeeping. To withstand the rigours of daily wear, the TYPE 7 features the Ressence Compression Lock System for enhanced water resistance, as well as a fixed bezel for structural strength. The XV Aquamarine features a lightweight aluminum bezel.

Speake-Marin Ripples Gold
For Watches and Wonders Geneva 2025, Speake-Marin continues to demonstrate their love affair with gold via the Ripples Gold—the first watch in the Ripples collection to feature an 18-karat rose gold case. Measuring 40.30mm in diameter, the elegant case showcases a blend of matt and polished surfaces, with a bezel that boasts polished beveled edges and satin-brushed surfaces. Housed within is a golden-brown dial, a complex creation featuring the signature Ripples horizontal wave pattern and small seconds sub-dial at the 1:30 (between one and two o’clock) position for the first time. It is paired with a taupe ostrich leather strap. This open-worked timepiece is the first Ripples watch to be housed in a 904L stainless steel case, offering increased resistance to corrosion and consistent 52-hour power reserve.

TAG Heuer Carrera Twin Time
Among TAG Heuer’s redesigned Carrera Day-Date models presented at Watches and Wonders 2025 is a teal-hued timepiece that stands out distinctively. This is the TAG Heuer Carrera Twin Time watch. Sized at 41mm, the fine brushed and polished steel case features a fixed bezel and a domed sapphire crystal glass over the dial. On the flange is a silver- and teal-toned track marked with 24 time zones. The GMT hand on the dial that features a red tip that looks like it is being held by a pair of tweezers used by watchmakers, as a nod to enthusiasts and collectors keen enough to identify the tool. Rhodium-plated Arabic numerals stand out on the teal dial. Matching rhodium plated hands are filled with Super-LumiNova. A tone-on-tone date window displays the date numeral in white against a teal background. The watch is powered by the brand’s new TH31-03 calibre with an impressive 80-hour power reserve.

Trilobe Une Folle Journée
Trilobe escalate things to another dimension with the all-new timepieces in the Une Folle Journée collection, featuring three colour variations: black, blue, and a first for the collection, green. Originally launched in 2022 with a black and blue version featuring Anthradec bridges, the collection has garnered the much-deserved admiration and awe. Set against a background of all-new rhodium-plated bridges with a grained texture, it responds beautifully to light and highlights the details of the watch face even more. The watches use three perpetually rotating rings set over nine columns that rise from the bridges. The inner-most ring with the most visible motion displays the running seconds, the middle one showcases the hours, and the outermost ring tells the current hour—all with the help of a red-coloured pointer. Housed in a compact 40.5mm Grade-5 titanium case, it displays its 3D mechanism through a highly domed sapphire crystal.

Ulysse Nardin Diver Air
A functional dive watch and a statement timepiece on land, the Ulysse Nardin Diver Air redefines convention for divers. An open-worked dial display with half the lightness offered by the brand’s previous diver, and still shock resistant to 5000Gs, the Ulysse Nardin Diver Air is an innovative timepiece that is just as ‘wholesome’. At 52g, the 44mm timepiece is crafted from recycled materials, making it a study in sustainability. Recycled carbon fibre gives the bezel its marbled appeal while Nylo-foil made from recycled fishing nets and carbon fibre makes up the case sides. Recycled titanium for the case middle houses the pared-down movement and gives the watch a water resistance of 200m. The calibre itself—the new UN-374 manufacture movement—is crafted from recycled titanium, and features silicon parts such as the oversized balance wheel that enhance its anti-magnetism. More importantly, the movement offers a power reserve of 90 hours. The Ulysse Nardin Diver Air—much like everything else they do—is a pioneer in dive watches.

Zenith G.F.J.
Zenith’s new G.F.J. timepiece, unveiled at Watches and Wonders Geneva 2025, revives the legendary calibre 135 chronometer in a 39mm platinum case. Named after founder Georges Favre-Jacot, this 160th anniversary piece features a three-layered dial with a brick guilloché pattern, deep blue lapis lazuli with starry pyrite flecks, and a mother-of-pearl small seconds subdial. The modernised calibre 135, which once dominated observatory competitions with 235 chronometry prizes, now offers 72 hours of power reserve, an optimised gear train, and stop-seconds function, all with COSC certification. This timepiece is limited to 160 pieces.
