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Nick Harris has gone far in what feels like a short amount of time. It wasn’t so long ago that he first made a name for himself modifying one-off Seikos for customers in his bedroom; now he’s finishing up a two-year stint in one of America’s few watchmaking schools. To pay his way through the program, Harris took his craft to the next level, creating Orion Watches and his first from-the-ground-up design. Now, with graduation looming, and with a desire to revive a lost industry of American watchmaking (which is no small feat), Harris has launched a new model, the Calamity, a dive timepiece as ambitious as his aspirations are.
“The Calamity is a much more serious watch. I pushed my manufacturer to up all the tolerances and quality, and I’m using a Swiss movement,” Harris tells me over the phone. “All that manufacturing I need to do is very expensive. The first Orion’s goal was to get me through school — and it did that — but the Calamity is the watch that will fund [the next phase].”
The Good: The Calamity is a watch that puts fit and finish above all else. This ethos manifests itself mostly in the case which, in addition to featuring some excellent finishing, is sculpted and designed to be thin, detailed and comfortable. This means that it looks refined in a way many dive watches don’t, and it feels great to wear, too. There’s more to the Calamity than the well-designed case (a quality movement from ETA and a ceramic bezel insert are other highlights), but it’s by far the thing that makes it stand out most and reason enough to consider it over a dive watch from an established brand.
Who They’re For: Somebody willing to take a chance on — let’s be honest here — an unknown brand if they favor detail, comfort and refinement over brand recognition. The Calamity is not a cheap watch, especially in the realm of micro-brands, but that doesn’t mean that it isn’t worth the price. It just means that it’ll have the most appeal to a very detail-oriented buyer.
Watch Out For: The Calamity is, for the most part, a solid watch, but there are a couple of small quibbles worth noting. For one, this watch doesn’t feature a date window on the dial (no doubt to appeal to the enthusiast crowd) but the movement’s set lever jumper is notched to accommodate the date function. This means that when you pull the crown out to set the time there’s still a secondary crown position for setting the date. It’s a small qualm, but a qualm nonetheless. Some reviewers have also criticized the bracelet clasp for feeling somewhat sub-par. I can kind of see where they’re coming from, but it’s a small point of contention and hardly a deal-breaker.