Pocket watches were designed and built during the glorious age of dedicated, purpose-built tooling, meaning that they did one thing and they did it very well. 12-in-1 multi-tools sold on infomercials were thankfully stil…
Continue readingThe Model 6 Rockford
Rockford saved some of their most interesting patterns for private labels and had a particular fondness for the square-on-round damaskeening, the only factory to do it in quantity. Their Model 6 was the predecessor to th…
Continue readingWaltham’s M92 Wind-Indicator
Waltham was one of only three companies to make 18-size wind-indicators. While Elgin and Rockford indicator hands simply coast to a stop in a circular seconds bit, Waltham’s Model 92 version limited the hand to a travel …
Continue readingSeth Thomas Model 12 Century
As collectors, we love unusual variants, like this 18-size Seth Thomas Century fronting a traffic-stopping green guilloche dial with gold numerals, and the unusual thing is that both are unmarked. It’s very common for Mo…
Continue readingMy Favorite Restoration Of All
A new customer from Virginia had been given a Hamilton 992E by an older acquaintance that he occasionally chatted with at his local coffee shop. The conversation had turned to pocket watches, and his friend said that he …
Continue readingNew Crystal or Keep the Old?
Installing a crystal is something that may happen multiple times in the service life of a watch, assuming that it was a daily carry piece back in the day, and easily could’ve been changed at least once before it came int…
Continue readingSimon Says
WARRANTY Watchartexchange has up to a 5 year warranty on all Sales and Repairs. Ebay or Chrono24 or even PayPal will not be there to help…
Continue readingSeth Thomas Model 6 Eagle
The Seth Thomas Models 6 and 7, marketed by the company as the Eagle, is one my favorite lesser grades because of the engraved eagle on the plates of the first few thousand examples. SN 515501 is the earliest known open-…
Continue readingPrivate Label Hamilton 930
Cripple Creek was the site of Colorado’s last great gold rush, as thousands of tin pans descended on the area in 1890. After everything of value was stripped from the earth it became a ghost town but now serves as a base…
Continue readingDennison, Howard & Davis
In 1854 the Warren Manufacturing Co moved from Roxbury to the newly-built factory in Waltham and changed their name to the Boston Watch Co. Up to that point roughly a thousand watches had been produced: the first twenty …
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