With little exception, we don’t really know the designers who create the watches we love. Sure, there are iconic designers (Gérald Genta comes to mind) but for the most part, the people who dream up the beautiful wrist-worn objects that we adore so much remain unnamed. Emmanuel Gueit is one of those designers, and while you’ve likely never heard of him, you’re probably familiar with his work. Two of his most notable works are the Rolex Cellini and the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Offshore.
The latter Gueit created just a few years into his tenure at Audemars Piguet, the brand where he started his watch designing career at the young age of 20. From there, he worked with Fossil in the United States, then returned to Europe to pursue watch and jewelry design on a freelance basis. Fossil and Audemars Piguet are two very extreme ends of the watchmaking spectrum, but as Guiet puts it, he can work with anything “from plastic to platinum.”
Now, Ikepod has tapped Guiet for their relaunch due later this year, via Kickstarter. The brand is now run by new owners and will relaunch with more of a focus on affordability. It’ll still lean heavily into the original Marc Newson design language that formed the basis for the brand in the early 1990s, but Guiet will be there to help the brand’s aesthetic grow, without straying too far from what made it a cult hit in the first place. I spoke with Gueit about his background and his plans for the brand’s revival.

Q: Tell me how you got your start in watch design.
A: My father was a watch designer, so I grew up in this business since I was just a little boy. When he was freelancing, he was working from home, so I was watching him work. And by this time, the watch business was really a small family, everybody knew everybody. So I saw big names and big CEOs coming to my house and meeting with my dad, and I was picking up the phone and talking to the CEO of Patek. It was like a big family, so for me it was natural.
My father didn’t push me, he said, “I want you to do what you want.” But he said I should start to learn to make jewelry because it was what he did. I was always really bad at school, so he sent me one year to a boarding school in England to learn English, and then he said, “We’ll see when you come back.” And just before I left for England I met the head of design at Audemars Piguet, and I wanted to sell some designs, sketches I’ve done. And she said I don’t like your designs but I like you, would you come work with me and AP? So when I came back I started my career with AP.