You have probably noticed that I am rather taken by 'alternative' methods of time display;
jump hours, mystery hands, rotating satellites, the use of
liquid...well here's another watch that has captured my attention for a
time-telling difference. It's a two-hander, but a quirky one.
The Musée d'Horlogerie du Locle is located in a small historic country
manor house called Château des Monts, about 1km north of the centre of
Le Locle, in the canton of Neuchâtel.
Open to the public, as well as a general collection of historical
timepieces and movements, the museum's collection also holds three
specific collections :
1. Collection Maurice Yves Sandoz – which includes 18th and 19th century Swiss automatons.
2. Collection Henri Jeanmaire – with its focus on marquetry clock cases
made by Charles André Boulle during the period of Louis XIV.
3. Collection Alfred Huguenin - focusing on the history of the Neuchâtel style pendule.
One of the pocket-watches that forms part of the Sandoz collection is a
circa 1800 oval piece by British watchmakers Vardon & Stedmann.
It features telescoping hands which expand and contract to follow the
shape of the case, the hands driven by a cam hidden above the centre
pinion.
The Sandoz family own Parmigiani Fleurier, and have decided to create a
modern iteration of this piece, called the "Toric Ovale with Telescopic
Hands".
Limited to 30 pieces in white gold and 30 in rose gold, the flame-blued
telescopic hands (identical to the original) get longer and shorter as
they move around the oval dial, retracting as they approach 3 and 9
o'clock, expanding at 12 and 6 o'clock, and remaining equidistant from
the bezel at all times.
The use of only four Arabic numerals highlights the pared back look of
the dial, with the numbers, markers and power reserve all matching the
blued hands.
The dial itself, with a date and eight day power reserve, is an exercise in symmetrically balanced simplicity. The Grand Feu enamel and blued-hands combination is a classic elegant combination that I am drawn to.
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