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You don’t have to be a watch aficionado to know the Braun AW 10 is all about design. Originally released in 1989, the AW 10 speaks to a spartan Bauhaus aesthetic that, at the time, was bold in its simplicity. The design of the original AW 10 — which was a product of the pioneering duo Dietrich Lubs and Dieter Rams — sought to display the time in the most practical and legible way possible. The AW 10 EVO, released last year, is touted as a re-tooling of the original design by Lubs himself. But to stop there is to do the AW 10 and the EVO a serious disservice.
Time vs. Tool
Most watches are concerned with a specific use; dive watches are engineered to withstand the crushing pressure of deep water, chronographs, to capture exact readings of elapsed time on the race track or while navigating in a plane.
But the original AW 10 is about an experience. A flat mineral crystal yields to a simple matte dial with distinct painted hour markers and two simple white baton hands for hours and minutes. Atop sits a custard yellow second hand which happily ticks its way about the contrasting steel and black barrel case. The crown is small and recessed, entirely hidden when worn. Square, straight lugs jut from the top and bottom of the case, almost irreverently, abutting squarely with a slightly tapered black leather strap. All of this gels in a punctuated and straightforward statement: the time is now.

The AW 10 EVO and EVO B