Joe_A
·Sometime toward the end of 2020 I bought a 1916 Gallet Electa trench watch which is now at my watchmaker for a full service. I'll have it back in my hands - and on my wrist now and then - in a month or so.
Before sending the watch out, we had a discussion about applying aged-look inert non-luminous material to the numerals and hands as part of a restoration. As it later turned out, my watchmaker only uses Super-LumiNova products (RC Tritec) and when I asked that the luminous material be restored without actual luminous material, this is a thing the watchmaker would not take on as his experience is with S-LN products only.
Several things attracted me to this watch.
I wanted to add one or two trench watches to my small collection and I thought a Borgel cased Gallet Electa in Sterling silver . . . and with a David Boettcher strap would be a very good start.
Let's have a look at the watch:
In my hand here . . .
and here:
The dial is in good shape with just a very fine hairline crack that is hard to see running from the center out to the edge between 11 & 12.
I've no way of knowing whether the seconds hand is original as it does look excessively 'length-challenged."
In any case, once on the timegrapher, it became clear that the watch needed service.
So here at last is the purpose of this post.
Does anyone know of a specialist, preferably in the U.S. who will apply a colorant to the hands and numerals that would be consistent with a 'proper' look for a watch having spent 100 years in a drawer somewhere? 😉
Should I bother to have faux lume applied?
The skeletal hands and naked numerals do look pretty good as is.
Cheers,
Joe
Before sending the watch out, we had a discussion about applying aged-look inert non-luminous material to the numerals and hands as part of a restoration. As it later turned out, my watchmaker only uses Super-LumiNova products (RC Tritec) and when I asked that the luminous material be restored without actual luminous material, this is a thing the watchmaker would not take on as his experience is with S-LN products only.
Several things attracted me to this watch.
I wanted to add one or two trench watches to my small collection and I thought a Borgel cased Gallet Electa in Sterling silver . . . and with a David Boettcher strap would be a very good start.
Let's have a look at the watch:
In my hand here . . .
and here:
The dial is in good shape with just a very fine hairline crack that is hard to see running from the center out to the edge between 11 & 12.
I've no way of knowing whether the seconds hand is original as it does look excessively 'length-challenged."
In any case, once on the timegrapher, it became clear that the watch needed service.
So here at last is the purpose of this post.
Does anyone know of a specialist, preferably in the U.S. who will apply a colorant to the hands and numerals that would be consistent with a 'proper' look for a watch having spent 100 years in a drawer somewhere? 😉
Should I bother to have faux lume applied?
The skeletal hands and naked numerals do look pretty good as is.
Cheers,
Joe