After seemingly coming out of nowhere last year with its smash-hit titanium dress watch, the Rivanera, Italian microbrand Echo/Neutra — which was actually founded back in 2019 — is seemingly everywhere.
Conan O’Brien has been wearing the brand’s 1956 3-Hands diver around, wearing it on rotation with his far more expensive Omega Seamaster NTTD and even name-dropping Echo/Neutra in a New York Times interview back in May. More recently, Kevin O’Leary showed off a Rivanera on Fox Business by displaying his usual breadth of watch knowledge and mixing up the brand and product names.
Echo/Neutra released a white-dialed second variant of the Rivanera back in July to great acclaim, and last month, the brand branched out with an all-new model, the Averau 42 Ceramic Chrono. I spent a few weeks with the watch, and while it may not be as head-turning as the sharp-angled Rivanera, it still offers something unique in the space thanks to its clever construction.
Two materials, one family

The main selling point of the new Echo/Neutra chronograph is its interesting case construction, which the brand calls TiFrame. It consists of a grade 2 titanium inner case that extends into the lugs and the strap integration system that is then surrounded by a black ceramic shell.
Such a setup gives you the best of both materials. The titanium inner core provides strength and rigidity that ceramic lacks, while the ceramic outer case gives you far superior scratch-resistance than you would get from pure titanium. The fact that the titanium extends into the lugs is a nice, thoughtful touch, as lugs are a frequent fail point of ceramic watches. (I’ve seen a few ceramic lugs snap off in my day.)





