All Content from Business Insider 10月23日 20:52
探索纽约手表展
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

作者参加了在纽约戈登厅举办的WatchTime New York活动,深入体验了手表制造商、品牌、专家和粉丝的聚会。文章详细描述了活动中的各种手表,从昂贵的限量版到独特的环保设计,以及作者如何被手表的魅力所吸引,并计划购买自己的手表。作者还强调了活动不仅是展示手表的机会,更是连接和交流的重要平台,让参与者深入了解手表世界。

🕒 活动在纽约戈登厅举行,是手表品牌展示新产品和让粉丝近距离观赏的机会。许多品牌在现场销售手表并提供预订服务,让消费者可以提前锁定心仪的款式。

🕓 作者在活动中体验了多种手表,包括Hautlence的紫色球体系列3手表,价值约87683美元,以及Oris用回收塑料制作的2900美元手表。这些手表展示了手表设计的多样性和创新性。

🕕 作者特别关注了Armin Strom的限量版Mirrored Force Resonance Ice Blue手表,该手表全球限量15只,具有独特的双平衡振荡器设计,展示了手表制作工艺的精湛。

🕖 活动中最吸引作者的是遇到的收藏家们,他们热衷于分享自己的手表和品牌知识,并交流行业信息。这种交流让作者对手表世界有了更深入的了解,并激发了购买手表的兴趣。

🕗 MB&F被认为是独立手表制作的‘超级明星’,尽管作者之前对其并不了解,但在活动中被其手表设计所吸引,表明作者已被手表的魅力所‘咬钩’,未来可能成为手表的潜在买家。

Inside WatchTime New York at Gotham Hall.

Before getting into this story, I need to make one thing clear: I don't own a watch.

It's not because I dislike them or because I'm a member of Gen Z who can't read analog. I'm just a 29-year-old millennial who relies on my phone a little too much — time-telling included.

On Sunday, though, I had the urge to change that.

I attended WatchTime New York, a multi-day event that brings watchmakers, brands, experts, and fans together to experience the latest timepieces on the market.

Almost instantly after entering, I'd felt like I'd joined an exclusive and luxurious club. I just needed to buy my own watch to secure a membership.

Here's what it was like inside.

WatchTime New York is a small but impactful convention of sorts.
People visit the Blancpain booth at WatchTime New York.

The event is held each year at Gotham Hall in Midtown. It's mainly a chance for brands to showcase their coming launches and let fans see them up close.

Some brands also sell watches at the event and offer waiting lists, allowing shoppers to reserve specific pieces for the future.

I attended this year on Sunday, the third day of festivities.

There was a short line of attendees waiting outside on a red carpet when I arrived about 15 minutes before the event started.

Once I joined, I overheard chatter about how Sunday is "the best day to go" for that exact reason: smaller crowds.

The event space was packed with brand activations, including some from luxury brands that even the most casual watch fan might recognize.

Upon entering, I was given a brief tour of the event floor by WatchTime editor in chief Roger Ruegger.

As a newbie to the watch world, I needed (and appreciated) this introduction. I didn't know where to start. That said, the average attendee would have no problem finding their way around.

Most independent brands were positioned to the right, while most prestige brands, such as Chopard and Piaget, were in the middle.

There were also small spaces upstairs and in a lounge room where more brands were tucked away. I recognized Greubel Forsey (a favorite of Mark Zuckerberg), Citizen, Breguet, G-Shock, and a few others, but even as a senior style reporter who's been covering fashion, including people's favorite watches, for eight years, I had a lot to learn about the rest.

Trying on watches was extremely fun.

Hautlence, a luxury Swiss brand, was my first stop once I joined the crowd on my own.

There, a representative introduced me to a purple Sphere Series 3 watch. He said that only 28 are made in each colorway before production ends.

He let me try on the piece, which costs 69,000 Swiss francs, or about $87,683. It was far lighter than I expected and unique in design. At each hour, a metallic ball spins and reveals the time.

Admittedly, the watch wasn't my style, but I could understand the brand's appeal overall.

Founded in 2004, Hautlence emerged to bring avant-garde designs to the luxury watch space. The brand's signature is thick, rectangle-shaped watches, though it has also experimented with futuristic technology, such as a watch that can be shaped into a small robot.

I saw a range of products — from handcrafted watches that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to a $2,900 timepiece made from recycled materials.
Two Aquis Date watches from Oris at WatchTime New York.

I found the latter style at Oris, an independent watch brand from Hölstein, Switzerland.

The 121-year-old company is known for its mechanical designs and certified climate-neutral status, which it achieved in 2021.

A brand representative told me that its upcycled watches each have unique faces, as they're made with recycled plastic.

A one-of-a-kind watch that costs under $3,000? It seemed like a solid deal to me.

Watch collectors seemed especially excited about the rare pieces on-site.
The Mirrored Force Resonance Ice Blue watch from Armin Strom.

During my tour with Ruegger, he showed me a new Armin Strom piece, limited to 15 pieces worldwide.

It features two balances that oscillate in opposite directions, which is a rare feature. The longer the watch runs, Reugger said, the more synchronized the balances become.

Naturally, I struggled to understand the mechanisms and physics that make it work. Luckily, Reugger said he felt the same way. All I really needed to know was that I was witnessing the watchmaking equivalent of magic.

Soon enough, I wanted a timepiece of my own.

A baby-pink watch with a mother-of-pearl face caught my eye.

The timepiece was from the British company Fears, one of the lower-priced brands at the event. Its watches range in price from $3,000 to $5,000.

The pink style I tried on has not yet been released to the public, but once it is, it will be priced in the middle of that range.

I adored its unique colorway, materials, and fashion-forward look. It was a bit too large in shape for my wrist, but I haven't stopped thinking about it since I left.

A pink watch might just be in my future.

It wasn't the fancy timepieces or prestige brands that really caught my attention. It was the watch collectors I met.

The initial draw of this event might be the exclusive opportunities to see new watches.

However, for shoppers, experts, and newcomers alike, the most valuable aspect of the event appears to be its opportunity for connection — a key aspect of securing coveted watches.

I saw countless people taking photos of each other's timepieces, introducing each other to new brands, and exchanging information to connect in the future.

The same went for the attendees I met, like Julia Gray and Eli Mensch. They were eager to show me the Omega watches they were wearing and share their vast knowledge about the industry.

They were also just two of the many people I met who predicted I'd "get bitten by the bug" before the day ended.

I learned a ton — and I think the experts there did too.
Inside WatchTime New York at Gotham Hall.

Before attending WatchTime New York, I assumed that the crème de la crème of watches always comes from brands like Rolex and Patek Philippe. Now, though, I know that watch collectors are more often drawn to the brands that speak to them.

Most booths seemed equally busy, with small crowds forming almost nonstop. At times, I had difficulty edging my way in to see watches up close.

The standout company seemed to be MB&F, or Maximilian Büsser & Friends. Though I'd never heard of the luxury Swiss brand before the event, it quickly moved to the top of my radar.

Reugger described the brand to me as the "superstar of independent watchmaking," with Büsser himself being "a rockstar." Almost everyone I met later said they were interested in visiting its booth.

So naturally, I took their cue and stopped by. Though its watches weren't exactly my style, I realized one thing while browsing its timepieces: I had, indeed, been bitten by the watch bug.

I might not have bought a watch on Sunday, but that wasn't really the point. Instead, I was turned into a potential buyer, or at the very least, a fan.

As one person told me, with no pun intended, it was about time.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

手表展 纽约 手表收藏 独立品牌 MB&F
相关文章