
We Love Dive Watches
Sure, you don’t need a dive watch, but the bulky, deep-dwelling tool watch makes for a great, casual timepiece.
Sure, you don’t need a dive watch, but the bulky, deep-dwelling tool watch makes for a great, casual timepiece.
From the chronograph to the tourbillon, here’s everything you ever wanted to know about watch complications.
The Chicago-based watch brand Oak & Oscar puts its spin on the travel watch.
A quick Q&A on the technology, process and challenges of timing cycling’s biggest event.
By Jason Heaton
One of the first watches to use Weiss’s (mostly) American-manufactured watch movement is available for pre-order on Kickstarter.
Traveling is fun, but it can be stressful.
By Gear Patrol
In a sea of dive watches, the Tudor Pelagos is an apex predator.
By Jason Heaton
The independent watch-repair shop might be a dying breed, but these 15 shops are keeping the art alive.
Forgotten, overlooked or just plain strange watches from the previous century, made new.
When was the last time you heard somebody endorse a 29mm watch?
By Chris Wright
Buying a groom-to-be a new watch is a great new wedding tradition.
Handsome, affordable and tough as nails — all you need for the perfect summer beater watch.
If Bremont had made watches for mid-century pilots, they would have looked like the U2/T, a new limited-edition collaboration with a Texas retailer.
By Jason Heaton
Respected among centuries-old high-end watch companies, Parmigiani tells us what’s right and wrong with the industry.
By Jason Heaton
History is great and all, but the Mark XVIII’s simplicity and legibility are enough to make watch nerds swoon.
This 4th of July, Weiss will unveil a new watch and (hopefully) a new era of the American watchmaking industry.
The ’60s are often heralded as a high point in watch design, but in the ’70s, watch companies dared to be avant-garde.
Traditionally, ceramic isn’t the ideal case material for dive watches.
Everything you need to travel safely with your watch collection.
By Nick Caruso