jzerore
·Hello!
My buddy got this manual-wind watch from his uncle when he passed away, and ordinarily I wouldn't think this was much more than a fancy jewelry store cladding an off-the-shelf movement in a gold case. The uncle, however, had pretty good taste in watches, and owned some pretty cool pieces—a wonderful Connie among them. And though I'm not a fan of the numerals on this watch, the hands are pretty neat, the dial is nicely turned, and the image on the back is straight-up awesome.
I know Asprey had a habit signing and white-labeling stuff, but that's the extent of my knowledge (about anything, really). I did a cursory forum search and checked out the usual for-sale sites, and found nothing like this watch at all. I was wondering if anybody here had an idea of when this watch is from and/or whose movement might be inside it.
It's not for sale or anything, just curious.
Thanks—and apologies for the crap photos. It was Cinco de Mayo, and I was more than a few margaritas deep.
J
My buddy got this manual-wind watch from his uncle when he passed away, and ordinarily I wouldn't think this was much more than a fancy jewelry store cladding an off-the-shelf movement in a gold case. The uncle, however, had pretty good taste in watches, and owned some pretty cool pieces—a wonderful Connie among them. And though I'm not a fan of the numerals on this watch, the hands are pretty neat, the dial is nicely turned, and the image on the back is straight-up awesome.
I know Asprey had a habit signing and white-labeling stuff, but that's the extent of my knowledge (about anything, really). I did a cursory forum search and checked out the usual for-sale sites, and found nothing like this watch at all. I was wondering if anybody here had an idea of when this watch is from and/or whose movement might be inside it.
It's not for sale or anything, just curious.
Thanks—and apologies for the crap photos. It was Cinco de Mayo, and I was more than a few margaritas deep.
J