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Hands-On with the Prototype Love 1 Watch

Regular readers who have been with Horolonomics for a while may well recognize the name Lovell Hunter. Dial close-up of Lovell Hunter's Love 1 prototype watch. I've posted a few articles about Lovell and his career in watchmaking, you can find those here and here and here. The TLDR from those posts is that Lovell is a professional watchmaker who worked, for many years, in the service center of a major Swiss brand. Recently he struck out on his own and founded his own independent brand, Love Hunter watches. His workshop is in Connecticut and he has worked with apprentices in the past. A good number of weeks ago, a watch event in New York City showcasing independent watchmakers crossed my feed. It's called Indies.NYC . MAD Editions, Kross Studio, Ondrej Berkus and a number of other brands participated alongside Love Hunter Watches. Lovell texted me now and then to share his progress on the development of his first watch. The Instagram photo which alerted me to ...
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The Curious Case of Wood's Swatch Board Activism

In some ways, I could understand investor Steven Wood's debut gambit to join the Swatch Group's Board of Directors. A Swatch in the collection of the Swatch Museum. As near as I can tell, Wood appeared on the scene around eight months ago and began leveling a lot of criticism. He claimed that, in light of his concerns, the Swatch Group Board of Directors should change in composition. Wood's primary allegation seemed to be that the Swatch Group share price didn't grow at a reasonable rate. Now, in those circumstances, the solution for any investor is straightforward: pull your money out or don't put your money there in the first place. Nobody is required to hold Swatch Group shares. But for Wood, the solution seems to be a type of slow-motion managerial coup attempt, one that I find bizarre for many reasons. I'd like to outline those here. First is the fact that this really does seem like a quixotic effort. The founding Hayek family controls something lik...

Visiting the Zeitwinkel Manufacture in St. Imier

I first became acquainted with independent watch brand Zeitwinkel sometime in 2020 during the pandemic. The doorway into Zeitwinkel's workshop. For a while, I'd seen a lot of folks posting about watch chats on Clubhouse, a new social media app experiencing shockingly rapid adoption. I hadn't been able to participate, though, because Clubhouse was iOS-only for quite a while. Eventually the app was released for Android and I hopped into a channel hosting watch industry chats. The discussions were informative and enjoyable. One of Zeitwinkel's co-founders, Albert Edelmann, was a regular. I appreciated his candor as well as his sense of humor. As time passed, we continued to chat online and I had the opportunity to meet Albert in person at a Redbar event and during Watchtime in New York. He extended an invitation to visit Zeitwinkel's workshop in Switzerland, which I really appreciated, but just couldn't arrange until this year. So back in September I found ...

Was COSC Robbed in 2022?

This week, an article in Swiss media caught my attention. An aerial view of the COSC lab in Le Locle. Screenshot from YouTube account SWISSKY. On Monday, the criminal trial of a 37 year old man began in the watchmaking hub city of La Chaux-du-Fonds. Allegedly, the defendant trafficked in marijuana. But what really drew my attention was the prosecutor's charge that "Boris" (the pseudonym given to the defendant in the case) had also trafficked in stolen watch parts. I read a bit more and the allegation is that Boris participated in a robbery in Le Locle at one of the Contrôle Officiel Suisse des Chronomètres (COSC) labs. I was surprised to read about this because I'd never heard about it before. As a reminder, COSC tests watch movements for accuracy and certifies them as "chronometers" if they pass the test. The process goes roughly like this: 1) a brand delivers movements to COSC for testing, 2) testing takes place, 3) chronometry certificate is issued...

Event Report: UBS House of Craft X Clymer X Hodinkee

I woke this morning at "zero dark thirty" in order to catch an Amtrak train into New York City. The exhibition entry. My destination was a preview of "Icons of Time," an exhibition and collaboration between UBS (a bank) and its "House of Craft," Hodinkee and Hodinkee's founder and President Ben Clymer. I'd missed the last gathering of this sort, held around the same time last year. But this time around my schedule allowed me to participate so off I went. The event promised to offer twelve timepieces, one for each hour marker on a watch dial, curated by Clymer. According to my invite, these timepieces were selected because they are rare and "[embody] both the vision of its maker and the enduring legacy of those who have worn it." I decided to see if I could guess ahead of the event which twelve might be featured. I promise I'm typing up this list as I ride the train. My first guess would be an Omega Speedmaster because that watc...

A Rolex Recovery Off Hawaii

There's a certain genre of watch lore involving lost and recovered timepieces. Arguably the most important of these is Cole Pennington's 2019 story of a watch worn by a Marine Corps pilot whose plane was shot down during a covert CIA operation over southern China in 1952. A photo of the recovered watch in question, photo credit Logan Barnard and Hawaii News Now. I've posted a couple of these stories as well, including one in which a watch owner faked throwing away a watch (only for his relatively to later find the watch was kept and sold) and another watch which was lost in a field by a farmer and later recovered. Rolex, the company, celebrated the "lost and found" story genre in the 1950s. An example of the "Fantastic Stories" campaign, this one about a watch lost underwater for seven years. In a series of advertisements dubbed "Fantastic Stories," Rolex retold some compelling experiences of watches and watch owners. At least two ...

The Persistence of RHT Claims

In 1946, economists Arthur Burns and Wesley Mitchell provided a formal definition of business cycles. I asked AI to create an image in the style of Salvador Dali's Persistence of Memory featuring the letters "RHT" and this is what I got. Their conceptualization is extensive but one of the most important elements is the idea that cycles are "recurrent but not periodic." In other words, fluctuations happen over and over again, but they do not follow a regular pattern. In the world of horology, recurrent but non-periodic processes are familiar and a great challenge when it comes to tracking the passage of months and years (as well as other events like Easter). The end of a month recurs twelve times each year, but the length of a month is not always the same (and leap years mean that February has an extra day every four years, I'd rather not even begin to talk about leap seconds). The past two years provide compelling evidence that the watch industry als...