
Rolex Quietly Discontinued Some of Its Top Watches. It’s Not the Only One
Did you miss the boat?

Did you miss the boat?

This yellow gold, diamond, and black sapphire-coated off-catalog release has an asking price of half a million dollars, but the story behind it is priceless.
By Ben Bowers

These Watches and Wonders sleepers are worth a second look.
By Gear Patrol

This sleeper hit from Grand Seiko uses vintage architecture with suave execution, featuring an indigo dial and a three-day power reserve.

If they would just combine all of these new features...

With a design inspired by ocean-going jellyfish, this bioceramic beauty hides a highly useful technical feature you'd never expect.
By Sean Tirman

More people should be talking about this.

One of the most respected names in all of watchmaking teams up with an unlikely partner for a small timepiece that's big on charm.
By Jack Seemer

The new Artelier collection consists of four models, but the time-and-date is an elegant dress watch optimized for daily wear.

Todd Snyder and Timex have outdone themselves with a rectangular, time-only quartz dress watch debuting in three gorgeous colors.

The manufacture that helped create the integrated bracelet sports watch category has finally entered it, with three models that are priced to compete.
By Ben Bowers

A rare vintage Khaki Field Mechanical watch issued by the US Air Force during the 1970s gets a remarkably faithful reissue.

No other brand impressed as much at Watches and Wonders.

Timex's spring sale includes some of its most feature-rich Marlin and Waterbury pieces, but an uptick in base pricing makes the true value more nuanced.
By Gear Patrol

Frederique Constant reasserts itself as the best value in Swiss in-house movement production with the smaller, more refined Classic Worldtimer.

It weighs less than a golf ball.

From commemorative Oyster Perpetuals to an elite Daytona, Rolex’s 2026 novelties prove the original Oyster case is still the brand’s most important idea.
By Ben Bowers

Zenith finally gives its Chronomaster Sport the skeleton dial treatment, but the bigger story is a revolutionary new bracelet feature.


Bremont partnered with Astrolab to make a chronograph that will be attached to a rover heading to the lunar surface, and you can buy it.