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Round-UpWristwatch Anatomy 101: All You Need To Know About Watch Components

A lowdown on all the external watch parts one needs to know about when shopping for a wristwatch, while getting it fixed or serviced, or when discussing a timepiece with horologists and enthusiasts in a social setting or even around the office water cooler

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Essentially, what one goes for when buying a watch is how it makes one feel, or how it looks on the wrist. But is it the shape of the case that’s attractive? The bezel, the glass or crown and guards? Or is it the dial colour, indexes or hands? Or perhaps, it is the bracelet. What do all of these terms mean anyway? Here’s a beginner’s guide to everything you ever wanted to know about a wristwatch and its components, but were perhaps too shy to ask.

Watch Components Norqain Independence Wild One
The Norqain Independence Wild One in a 42mm case. The case is the component that holds other components together

Case

The watch case is a chamber that holds the various components of a timepiece. It comes in myriad shapes and sizes, materials and colours. Tool watches (used as equipment for a certain function or profession) are defined by their sizes and materials. A pilot’s watch, for instance, usually has a large case so that legibility remains uncompromised, while a diver’s watch uses materials that won’t corrode in seawater. Popular materials used for cases are steel, titanium, bronze, gold, platinum, silver, carbon and ceramic. Brands are known to create sturdy alloys that lend a certain robustness to the case as this is the first of the watch components to bear the impact of a fall. The shape of the case defines the timepiece. This is where one hears the terms ‘round’, ‘square’, tonneau’, ‘asymmetrical’ etc.

The Watch Guide

Featuring an eight-sided case, the Bulgari Octo Finissimo is 40mm wide, with a height of only 6.40mm

The Watch Guide

The asymmetrical case of the Urwerk UR-120 Space Black measures a robust 44mm and features a crown at the 12 o'clock position

The Watch Guide

Hublot's Big Bang Unico Red Magic features a large 45mm case made from ceramic

The Watch Guide

The 41mm cushion-shaped case of the Tissot Sideral S Powermatic 80 is made from forged carbon

The Watch Guide

The square-ish case of the Longines Dolce Vita mini measures 21.5mm by 29mm

Lugs

Lugs are the prongs that stick out of the case and attach to the watch strap. A metal spring bar between the lugs fastens the strap/bracelet onto the watch case. On a larger case, short and curved or angled lugs help the watch wrap around the wrist comfortably, aiding ergonomics.

The Watch Guide
Hublot's watch case and lugs made from sapphire crystal glass
Crown and crown guards

The crown is usually on the right of the case at the three o’clock position. It is used to wind a mechanical watch, and set the time, and/or the date. Some brands fit the crown with the lugs at 12 o’clock, or place it at an easily accessible position on the case, mostly between four and five o’clock. A pilot’s watch has a larger crown than usual for ease of use through gloved fingers. Raised extensions on either side of the crown are the guards that protect it. Not all watches have guards, though.

Glass

The glass is the protective, transparent cover of the dial, often referred to as the crystal. Sapphire crystal is the most popular material used for the glass, owing to its scratch-resistant properties, but there are other kinds of glass and crystal used as well. The watch glass is sometimes curved over the dial for a better view from various angles, and it is almost always treated with a coating that makes it antireflective.

  • The Watch Guide

    The Panerai Luminor Due Luna in a 38mm steel case with a cushion shape, with the brand's iconic crown guard

  • The Watch Guide

    The Jacob & Co Brilliant One Row Rose Gold in a 38mm case size. The crown at three o'clock is decorated with diamonds

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    Chronoswiss are known for their oversized onion-shaped crowns. Seen here is the Chronoswiss Sirius Opus Chronograph Titanium timepiece

  • The Watch Guide

    Louis Moinet's skeletonised lugs as seen on the brand's Time to Race watch

  • The Watch Guide

    The TAG Heuer Carrera Chronograph features the brand's 'glassbox' crystal curved over a blue dial

Pushers

Watches with a chronograph function have a pusher—usually above the crown at two o’clock on the right of the case—to start and stop the stopwatch mechanism, and one to reset the chronograph mechanism—usually under the crown at four o’clock. Sometimes, these are integrated into the crown guards. Other times, the two pushers stand out against the case, indicating the coveted complication they control. Monopusher chronographs have one only one pusher on the case, usually at the two o’clock position. The term ‘pusher’ is often used for other components used for correcting functions such as the date.

Bezel

The ring around the case that frames a dial and holds the glass over it is the bezel. In dive watches, the bezel is marked with a distinct diving scale that serves a life-saving function—measuring elapsed time spent under water. The bezel is usually made from the same material as the case, but not always. Sometimes, it lends a ring of contrast as a frame for the dial, or it can be used to decorate the watch-face with precious stones. Other times it is ‘knurled’ into a ridged pattern to enhance the overall aesthetic of a timepiece. Different scales mark a bezel. There’s the dive timer on a unidirectional-rotating bezel. Then there’s the tachymeter, which is used to measure the speed of an object over a known distance, and is popular on racing watches.

Read about the other scales on a bezel here

The Watch Guide

Diamonds decorate the bezel of Jaeger-LeCoultre's Rendes-Vous Classic Moon timepiece

The Watch Guide

The fluted bezel of the Oris ProPilot X Calibre 400 Laser watch

The Watch Guide

Unidirectional dive bezel on the Omega Seamaster Diver 300m

Dial

Perhaps the most striking visible component of the watch, the dial or the watch face is what actually shows the time. Dials are created with age old-techniques such as guilloche and enamelling to new-age technology like laser-engraving. Materials like ceramic, mother-of-pearl, meteorite, aventurine glass, gold and titanium are popular for watch dials. A skeleton dial is one that displays the movement that powers the watch. As skeleton dials become more popular, the components of the movement are decorated with treatments such as PVD for a more appealing overall impact.

Markers and hands

A watch face may have numerals or indexes that help tell the time. Then there are minimalistic watches that have neither. Just the timekeeping hands indicate the hours, minutes, and seconds. In a way, the shape of the hands define the watch. Leaf hands, for instance, are elegant, while baton hands are matter-of-fact and functional, just as arrow hands make a watch look sporty, while dauphine hands are more formal.

Click here to know more about the various kinds of watch hands

The Watch Guide

Omega introduced ceramic dials for their Seamaster Diver 300m series, which feature the material's chemical formula ZrO2 in the centre of the dial

The Watch Guide

Coloured mother-of-pearl dials on the Oris Aquis Date timepieces

The Watch Guide

The Doxa Sub 600T timepieces feature a range of colours on their dials

The Watch Guide

The Arnold & Son Luna Magna Red Gold Meteorite timepiece features a larger than life moon phase display at six o'clock and the timekeeping sub-dial at 12

The Watch Guide

Louis Moinet's Memoris Spirit features a timekeeping sub-dial at six o'clock while the rest of the dial is skeletonised

Sub-dials

Smaller counters on a watch dial serve various functions—as chronograph recorders, moon phase indicators, displaying of the seconds, a second time zone, or the time left till the watch needs to be wound again, among other functions. They can even display the indexes and hands, serving as the main time-telling component of a watch. These are the sub-dials. Whether one actually uses the function displayed, sub-dials give the watch an important-looking aesthetic. Yes, they sometimes make a watch look busier, but then again, they also give the watch that much more purpose.

Strap And Clasp

The strap or bracelet are the components used to secure a watch to the wrist, and can be made from a variety of materials. Leather—calfskin, alligator, etc—is a popular choice for a watch strap. Steel and titanium are preferred for their hypo-allergenic properties, while gold and its alloys are the more luxurious choices. Then there are fabric straps made from materials like cotton, canvas, nylon and satin. Rubber, ceramic, and more sustainable materials like recycled plastic have also made their way onto the wristwatch. An integrated strap is one that flows seamlessly from the watch case and gives the timepiece not just a sportier aesthetic but also a better ergonomic fit. The clasp is used to secure the two ends of the strap together.

Read more about different clasps here

  • The Watch Guide

    The integrated bracelet on the H. Moser & Cie. Streamliner Flyback Chronograph flows seamlessly from the watch case

  • The Watch Guide

    Tissot's tonneau-shaped PRX Powermatic 80 features an integrated bracelet that enhances ergonomics of the watch

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    The butterfly clasp on the Omega Speedmaster

  • The Watch Guide

    TAG Heuer's Monaco Racing Blue timepiece features a perforated 'racing' leather strap

  • The Watch Guide

    TAG Heuer's fabric strap and clasp

Do you have any questions about the external components of a watch? Feel free to comment below

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