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Oris has been making a pointer date watch, in one form or another, since 1938, and the timepiece you see here is its freshest iteration, launched at Baselworld earlier this year. The pointer date is a complication deeply associated with the Swiss watchmaker and also something of an oddball today. Save for the Mido Multifort Datometer, you won’t find any other mainstream manufacturer selling one today. Yet it’s a complication that makes a lot of sense.
You don’t have to look very far online to find enthusiasts complaining about the more ubiquitous date window disrupting the flow of the dial. However, watch companies defend the date complication as an essential and useful addition for buyers who likely don’t identify as hardcore enthusiasts. The pointer date — which uses a hand that, well, points to the day of the month around the outside of the dial — is the perfect middle ground, leaving the dial clean and retaining the practicality of the date complication.
This, however, is just scratching at the Big Crown’s “Goldilocks” quality – this is a watch that thrives in the middle ground. The Big Crown is full of wonderful contradictions and capable of making compromises that, well, don’t actually feel like compromises.
The Good: The Big Crown Pointer Date somehow feels convincingly vintage, yet distinctly modern – dressy when it wants to be, casual everywhere else. It both stands out, yet can blend in. This is because Oris stuffed the watch with tons of little details that play to the watch’s heritage and then paired them with others that subvert the idea of the super-accurate vintage reissue (albeit with pastel-like dial colors). And since the basic design takes inspiration from a pilot’s watch from the 1930s, it certainly has enough roguish charm to be considered casual, but there’s so much dignity and refinement present here that it’ll play nicely with a sweater or a suit. This is to say nothing of the fact that it’s packing an obscure mechanical complication and will cost you only $1,600.
Who They’re For: Any person looking to dip into luxury watches who doesn’t want to spend very much money. Spending $1,600 on a watch is undoubtedly a big step into watch ownership, but most of the finishing here is on par with similar watches that would cost hundreds or even thousands more. Further, given the Big Crown’s versatility, it could work for any occasion, precluding the need to spend more money to build up a more varied collection.