Ask most watch enthusiasts today about Blancpain, and they’ll first point to the Fifty Fathoms diver. But despite the icon’s influence as the world’s first modern dive watch, the Fifty Fathoms is just a small part of the brand’s story.
For instance, when Jean-Claud Biver revived the world’s oldest watch brand in the 1980s after its Quartz Crisis-induced hiatus, the Fifty Fathoms wasn’t part of the plan. Instead, the brand was committed to producing high-end, complicated, mechanical dress watches. The legendary dive didn’t even reenter Blancpain’s permanent catalog until its 2007 relaunch.
So it should come as no surprise that the most impressive watch in Blancpain’s 290-year history has nothing to do with the Fifty Fathoms and everything to do with the brand’s complete mastery in the field of haute horlogerie.

Two-hit wonder
Unveiled today is the Blancpain Double Grande Sonnerie, and it officially takes the crown as the most complicated watch Blancpain has ever made. It also marks an impressive first in all of watchmaking.
Many watchmakers will point to the grande sonnerie as the most difficult complication to assemble, ranking even higher than perpetual calendars, split-seconds chronographs and tourbillons. A grande sonnerie is a chiming complication that automatically plays the hour and respective quarter-hour every fifteen minutes.





