
How Did the Rolex Daytona Go From Flop to Icon?
The Daytona is one of Rolex’s most popular models, but there was a time when Rolex dealers could hardly give them away.
The Daytona is one of Rolex’s most popular models, but there was a time when Rolex dealers could hardly give them away.
Bell & Ross's square-cased BR 01 may not be for everyone, but it's become a modern classic. Here's its story.
By Zen Love
The EZM 1 is emblematic of the function-first approach that’s won German brand Sinn its dedicated fans.
By Zen Love
Debate over the first automatic chronograph made is heated. But the Zenith El Primero is arguably still the best automatic chronograph over 50 years later.
The Longines Lindbergh Hour Angle watch was the original Global Positioning System.
By Jason Heaton
Bronze wasn't always a staple of the watch industry — in fact, the first bronze watch ever just might surprise you.
By Zen Love
No timepiece better represents Grand Seiko's technical and aesthetic prowess better than the Snowflake.
By Zen Love
The Tank is one of the most elegant and iconic watches ever made, but it owes its significance to more than a just great design.
By Zen Love
The man who created the famous Porsche 911 also gave the world its first all-black watch, which still looks sleek and modern 50 years later.
By Zen Love
The innovative Cartier Santos was the first pilot’s watch.
By Zen Love
The Angelus Chronodato is the progenitor of the triple-calendar chronograph, a classic watch style originating in the mid-20th century.
By Zen Love
The Zodiac Sea Wolf is the forgotten dive watch that, in 1953, introduced the world’s most popular watch genre along with luminaries Rolex and Blancpain.
By Zen Love
When the Straight Edge movement gained ground in the 1980s, its adherents quickly adopted an affordable watch whose symbol matched their ideology.
By Scott Ulrich
The Bulova Accutron Spaceview, replete with incredible accuracy and a space-age look, represented a technological milestone that foreshadowed quartz watches.
By Zen Love
The Benrus Sky Chief was used by pilots for navigation in the 1940s, when commercial aviation was young and cockpits were a lot more analog.
By Zen Love
The Rado DiaStar is a watch that pioneered ceramics in watchmaking decades before its use came into vogue.
By Zen Love
When the IDF’s Shayetet 13 needed a badass dive watch for special ops, it was the Eterna Super Kon-Tiki that delivered.
By Zen Love
When Omega made one of the earliest tourbillon wristwatches in the ’40s, they didn’t know what it would later mean to the watch industry.
By Zen Love
The Hamilton Ventura was technically and aesthetically ahead of its time in 1957 when it became the first-ever battery-powered wristwatch.
By Zen Love
Silicon is the future of the mechanical watch industry, and it was first used in the avant-garde and revolutionary Freak by Ulysse Nardin.
By Zen Love