For me ,this years Rolex/Tudor offerings were a huge success in making previous models even more desirable ,& only makes me appreciate the classics even more . So a big thank you to Rolex/Tudor from me .
Frankly, it goes a bit further for me... that Tudor makes me embarrassed to be a watch collector. Rolex I could care less about, there's not remotely a single design element on a single model of their current offerings that appeals to me, but Tudor had been doing so well in the past few years and now this :/
Well I suppose Tudor took the "Born to dare" slogan a little to seriously when they designed the Black Bay P01, apparently receiving mixed reviews according to the "Hodonkee" folk on the link below 😁
https://www.instagram.com/p/BvMLxMzn22O/
Well I suppose Tudor took the "Born to dare" slogan a little to seriously when they designed the Black Bay P01, apparently receiving mixed reviews according to the "Hodonkee" folk on the link below 😁
https://www.instagram.com/p/BvMLxMzn22O/
For me ,this years Rolex/Tudor offerings were a huge success in making previous models even more desirable ,& only makes me appreciate the classics even more . So a big thank you to Rolex/Tudor from me .
Gee you folks are tough! The consumer who doesn’t presently own or hasn’t owned an earlier version of one of these new offerings is likely whom Rolex is after. The only updated version of a veteran Rolex I really have an intense dislike for is the Air-King. U-G-L-Y, in my opinion. Give me my one owner, 48-year-old Air-King-Date. Retail price in 1971 was $215.00. Not presently on my wrist.