philh
·I have just bought my first NOS watch which was a 1971 Seiko 6139 still in its blue plastic case with tag and papers but whilst it is a cracking watch it has failed to excite me. I can only put this down to the fact it has no history other than it has sat in a garage for 40 plus years.
I collect vintage watches and whilst I spend hours looking for unpolished cases,original hands ,dials etc is that really what I want ?
That's what the investment market wants but it feels a little cold and calculated when I have it in my hands
It has got me thinking about what matters most to me about a watch. Condition versus history
In 20/30 years time would I want to buy a watch someone bought new today and purely parked it in a drawer untouched or buy the same watch but it had seen a life . Now the ideal would be a watch with a documented history so perhaps the way to go is to keep a watch diary
My wife already thinks I am weird but this would really freak her out
I collect vintage watches and whilst I spend hours looking for unpolished cases,original hands ,dials etc is that really what I want ?
That's what the investment market wants but it feels a little cold and calculated when I have it in my hands
It has got me thinking about what matters most to me about a watch. Condition versus history
In 20/30 years time would I want to buy a watch someone bought new today and purely parked it in a drawer untouched or buy the same watch but it had seen a life . Now the ideal would be a watch with a documented history so perhaps the way to go is to keep a watch diary
My wife already thinks I am weird but this would really freak her out