uemis Zurichi Watch
An upgrade of the traditional dive computer, uemis’ Zurichi watch is a scuba diving assistant with a 10,000:1 contrast OLED display, solar cell for recharging and non-slip slide controls.
An upgrade of the traditional dive computer, uemis’ Zurichi watch is a scuba diving assistant with a 10,000:1 contrast OLED display, solar cell for recharging and non-slip slide controls.
Tokyoflash wasted no time ringing in the new year: their bling’d out R75 watch sports LED dots but is surprisingly straightforward: the bottom half simply shows LCD-style numerals.
One of the hottest skeleton watches ever, Hautlence’s HLq watch features avante garding styling with a stainless steel case, manually wound caliber and crocodile strap.
Specially created for the 25th anniversary of Casio’s venerable G-Shock brand, these three figures (limited to 100) aren’t for sale but are on display at various Casio stores in Japan.
BRM is well-known for its racer/industrial aesthetics, and their Perfed Watches are no different; both feature perforated hands and details, high contrast colors and sharp arabic numbers.
The hinged watch face on Eterna’s KonTiki Diver watch isn’t just a gimmick; it allows divers to set the diving time and then lock it into the strap to avoid unintentional rotation.
Nixon’s stainless steel 51-30 watch is getting two new colorways; we like the swank red on black tones of Gunmetal, while All Gold/Brown suits those with a propensity for bling.
Brando’s MP4 Watch & Camera reads like a geek’s ultimate feature list: 1.8″ TFT screen, 8GB onboard memory, audio and video playback, built-in video camera and speaker.
The calculator watch makes a mathemagical comeback with Vestal’s Calcutron; with a chiseled stainless steel case and steel expansion band, it’ll let you geek in style.
Worn by Richard Garriott (of Ultima fame) during his trip to the ISS, Seiko’s Spring Drive Spacewalk watch was designed to survive the rigors of space travel, including 9gs during reentry.
Tokyoflash’s Waku watch is a step away from their metal/plastic designs, but is no less cryptic or minimalist; the leather strap extends onto the face, which hides 15 multicolored LEDs.
Julien Bergignat’s Tima watch concept is an excellent blend of form and function; ePaper allows it to display analog or digital time on a lengthy curved surface that hugs the wrist.
Got a freshly minted Ferrari California in the garage? Panerai’s Ferrari California watch is a made for racers, with quick-reset flyback function and redline between 12 and 3.
Raymond Weil’s Nabucco Cuore Caldo is the first split-second watch with a power reserve indicator; other luxury touches include 18K pink gold, carbon fiber and sapphire crystal.
The folks at Tokyoflash been busy lately; hot on the heels of the NI is the Kisai Tenmetsu. Resembling a flashing traffic light, each color represents different units of time.
We’ve featured some expensive watches, but this Horizon Watch is incredulous in its simplicity: it looks great, but for $39k you’re basically paying for designer Mark Newson’s name.
Guys with a penchant for mechanicals will like EleeNoLITE’s Wheel Watch; it’s an unusual analog watch with notched cutouts that slowly fill depending on the hour and minutes.
Roger Dubuis’ Easy Diver SED watch bares it all with a gorgeous open skeleton set in a 48mm titanium case; the hand-wound movement is tied to a 60-hour flying tourbillon at 7.
Despite a simple name, Tokyoflash’s NI watch is obtuse enough to require labels explaining its five-line LED readout; we’re digging the polished stainless steel case, however.
Telling time is the least of the Polar FT80 watch’s functions: it keeps you within your target heart rate during exercise, while an optional GPS tracks distance covered and speed.
We think Nooka’s new line of urban-inspired Zen-H watches look best in its original jungle grey camo colorway; it sports a stainless steel case, butterfly PU band and EL backlight.
Based on a lean, mean naked bike of the same name, Jean Richard’s MV Agusta Brutale watch has a PVD black titanium case, sapphire crystal and JR1000 Caliber movement.
Botta’s UNO 24 watch is brutally efficient: all 24 hours are displayed, so its hour hand makes just one rev per day; a horizon line also roughly indicates the position of the sun in the sky.
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