SkunkPrince
·I am working towards getting up a set of watches I want to sell. One thing that bothers me is the "fetish", if you will, of seeing movement pictures.
I get it for a random watch you don't know the history of. All of mine have been serviced and anything untoward has been taken care of. Some of these I bought new and rarely worn, so there's nothing to see. One of them, a Hamilton Langdon, is in a "cld" case... and you can't just randomly open one of those. You have to replace the seals every time.
I have one unserviced Seamaster that I asked my watchmaker to open up, take pictures, and comment on the movement condition, and I thought that reasonable.
For watches I have had serviced and then they sat in the box, does it really matter?
Mind you, I get it when you might not know the person. I would hope being a forum member for quite a while would be helpful.
Curious what your thoughts are.
I get it for a random watch you don't know the history of. All of mine have been serviced and anything untoward has been taken care of. Some of these I bought new and rarely worn, so there's nothing to see. One of them, a Hamilton Langdon, is in a "cld" case... and you can't just randomly open one of those. You have to replace the seals every time.
I have one unserviced Seamaster that I asked my watchmaker to open up, take pictures, and comment on the movement condition, and I thought that reasonable.
For watches I have had serviced and then they sat in the box, does it really matter?
Mind you, I get it when you might not know the person. I would hope being a forum member for quite a while would be helpful.
Curious what your thoughts are.