Oris – WatchTime – USA's No.1 Watch Magazine https://www.watchtime.com Wristwatch reviews, watch news, watch database. Fri, 16 Jun 2023 15:54:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.watchtime.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/WatchTime_Icon-205x205.jpg Oris – WatchTime – USA's No.1 Watch Magazine https://www.watchtime.com 32 32 WatchTime New York 2023 Tickets on Sale Now https://www.watchtime.com/featured/watchtime-new-york-2023-tickets-on-sale-now/ https://www.watchtime.com/featured/watchtime-new-york-2023-tickets-on-sale-now/#respond Fri, 16 Jun 2023 15:26:07 +0000 https://www.watchtime.com/?p=150577 Following what was one of WatchTime New York’s biggest shows to-date in 2022, the esteemed collector’s event returns to Manhattan once again this year from October 20th to 22nd. WatchTime New York 2023 will bring together many of the world’s most impressive watchmakers and timepieces alongside countless enthusiasts, collectors, and industry experts. The multi-day event will feature watch brand presentations, industry panel discussions, and plenty of opportunities for horological hands-ons and in-depth conversations. Tickets are on sale now via WatchTime’s event site, here.

The live and in-person three-day event will once again take place at midtown Manhattan’s Gotham Hall and will welcome an eclectic and impressive group of more than 30 participating watch brands, as well as collectors, connoisseurs, industry VIPs and influencers, and other members of the worldwide watch community. This year’s edition will span three days, from Friday, October 20, through Sunday, October 22, with an exclusive cocktail party and watch show on opening night, followed by full day shows, panels, and presentations throughout the rest of the weekend.

For 2023, participating brands include A. Lange & Söhne, Armin Strom, Arnold & Son, Bell & Ross, Blancpain, Bovet, Breguet, Bremont, Carl F. Bucherer, Chopard, Chronoswiss, Cyrus, Czapek, Frederique Constant, G-SHOCK, Gerald Charles, Glashütte Original, Greubel Forsey, H. Moser & Cie., HYT, Laurent Ferrier, Louis Erard, MB&F, Moritz Grossmann, Norqain, Oris, Parmigiani Fleurier, Perrelet, Reservoir, RGM, Speake-Marin, Voutilainen, and Zeitwinkel. The event is presented in partnership with the renowned jeweler and exquisite timepiece retailer Wempe.

Industry panels will be presented on Saturday and Sunday at 12pm and 2pm and are included in price of admission. 

  • Watch Brand Collaborations: Moderated by Renowned Collector Jeff Kingston
  • The Return of the Dress Watch: Moderated by Jeff Kingston
  • Time for Sustainability: Moderated by WatchTime Editor-in-Chief Roger Ruegger
  • A New Day – Trends in Collecting for Men and Women: Moderated by WatchTime’s Senior Editor Bilal Khan and Publisher Sara Orlando

WatchTime and its partners are incredibly excited to welcome you back this October for this fantastic and important event. Tickets are available now, here, along with more info on WatchTime New York 2023 and its participating brands.

Time & Location

Oct 20, 5:30 PM – Oct 22, 4:00 PM

Gotham Hall, 1356 Broadway, New York, NY 10018, USA

Ticket Details

Two types of tickets are available for admission to WatchTime New York 2023: Friday Night VIP 3-day weekend admissions and general admission single day tickets. The Friday Night VIP Weekend admission is an all-inclusive offering with access to WatchTime New York’s opening night cocktail reception and re-entry on Saturday and Sunday at no extra cost. General admission permits access on either Saturday or Sunday, but not the Friday cocktail reception.

  • Friday Night VIP Cocktail Reception, October 20th: 5:30pm-8:30pm
  • Saturday General Admission, October 21st: 11am-5pm
  • Sunday General Admission, October 22nd: 11am-4pm

Friday Night VIP tickets are priced at $189, here, with single day general admission tickets priced at $39, here. Use code EARLYBIRD at checkout for $10 off VIP weekend admission, and code EARLYBIRDBOGO for two GA tickets for the price of one! Both promo codes expire on June 30.

Industry panels will be presented on Saturday and Sunday at 12pm and 2pm and are included in price of admission.

To learn more, visit WatchTime’s event site, here.

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Oris Adds Colorful Mother-of-Pearl Dials to the Aquis Date Collection https://www.watchtime.com/wristwatch-industry-news/oris-adds-colorful-mother-of-pearl-dials-to-the-aquis-date-collection/ https://www.watchtime.com/wristwatch-industry-news/oris-adds-colorful-mother-of-pearl-dials-to-the-aquis-date-collection/#respond Thu, 08 Jun 2023 13:02:00 +0000 https://www.watchtime.com/?p=149629 The Aquis Date is one of Oris’s most successful watches. The latest addition, the Aquis Date 36.5mm, upholds this reputation and adds a colorful appeal with its mother-of-pearl dial. The new release is comprised of three stainless steel models sporting a blue, green, or pink dial, each with a color-coordinated rubber strap. The hands and hour markers are luminescent and the seconds display has a luminous dot that is visible even in low light conditions.


With a diameter of 36.5mm, the Aquis Date 36.5mm qualifies as a unisex model watch. As a true diver’s watch, it offers all the essential functions that characterize this genre. Its case is water resistant to a depth of 300 meters (30 bar) and is equipped with a unidirectional rotating bezel with a minute scale, which can be used to measure time during immersions.

The crown is screw-down and provides additional protection to prevent water from ingress. The colorful newcomer is powered by Oris caliber 733 on a Sellita base SW200-1 a.

Pricing for the Oris Aquis Date 36.5mm is marked at $2,350.

To learn more, visit Oris, here.

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Oris Dawns a Violet Aquis for its Annual Hölstein Edition https://www.watchtime.com/wristwatch-industry-news/oris-dawns-a-violet-aquis-for-its-annual-holstein-edition/ https://www.watchtime.com/wristwatch-industry-news/oris-dawns-a-violet-aquis-for-its-annual-holstein-edition/#respond Thu, 01 Jun 2023 12:01:00 +0000 https://www.watchtime.com/?p=150116 Swiss watchmaker Oris was founded nearly 120 years ago on June 1, 1904, a date which has become quite significant for the brand in more ways than one. To commemorate the registration of the brand, Oris releases a special, 250-piece limited edition watch on June 1st of every year. Called the Hölstein Edition, this year’s newcomer to the annually developed collection is the Aquis diver’s watch. The Aquis is a best seller for Oris, this time debuting a rich purple hue and omitting a date window for the first time. 

The 41.5mm steel case features a multi-piece construction with a beveled bezel and crown. The unidirectional bezel has a gray ceramic insert that complements the cool tone of the steel exterior. On the reverse of the case is an engraved limited-edition number alongside a printed illustration of the Oris Bear dressed in scuba gear. While a cheeky inclusion, the graphic does reference the diving capabilities of the watch, which is water resistant up to 300 meters. 

Making a notable debut for the brand is the vibrant violet hue that washes over its dial. The purple surface is an uninterrupted backdrop for silver-tone hands and indices that are all filled with Super-LumiNova® for ultimate legibility. The bright hue of the dial really is its centerpiece, as the brand opts for a quite simplified layout exempt of complication or frill. 

Powering the watch is the caliber 400, an automatic movement with improved accuracy and elevated anti-magnetism to its predecessors. The key difference in this movement is its exclusion of a date indication. Though previously a characteristic element of the Aquis, the community of Oris wearers requested that the brand omit this feature from the model, and their wishes were clearly heard. Capable of indicating hours, minutes, and seconds with a fine timing and stop-second device, the movement has a 120-hour power reserve. 

Production of the Oris Aquis Hölstein Edition is limited to 250 pieces, with pricing for each marked at approximately $4,440 when converted to USD.

To learn more, visit Oris here.



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Green Rambles: Being Sustainable Ain’t Easy https://www.watchtime.com/featured/green-rambles-being-sustainable-aint-easy/ https://www.watchtime.com/featured/green-rambles-being-sustainable-aint-easy/#respond Sat, 29 Apr 2023 13:01:00 +0000 https://www.watchtime.com/?p=139088 The environment is a hot topic. Quite literally, as life for us will become far less sustainable as the earth is heating up. It will make the oceans rise, the weather far more unpredictable and volatile, accelerates desertification, and the list goes on. To turn the tide, a change is needed, fast and quite radical. While the vast majority of the watch industry underscores this, making actual changes proves to be quite challenging.

Chopard LUC XPS Fairmined

One of the most significant issues is that, in particular, high-end watches are luxury goods. As the name already implies, these are things that are (very) nice to have but by no means a necessity. Closing down production is not a solution, as this is along the line of committing collective suicide to save the environment. The best course of action is to do things differently. That is, by itself, already a momentous task because it is sometimes complicated to determine the best way to serve the environment, also because the impact of individual actions cannot be measured so easily, let alone compared.

I struggle with this in my personal life as well, and those struggles are not any different for watch manufacturers. We can debate on what the best course of action it, but I feel that the best thing is to start simply somewhere. Chopard has been a trailblazer when it comes to lowering the environmental footprint of the use of gold by using only 100% ethical gold in their manufacture, which not only focuses on the environment, but on social aspects as well.

Panerai has also set out on a quest to become an environmentally responsible watch manufacturer, as they showed with the eLAB-ID PAM01225. They even shared the details of their suppliers, allowing other brands to follow in their footsteps.

These are actions that make a difference, as Oris also proves. That brand is working very hard to make sustainability the core of its DNA, not only by raising funds for non-profit environmental organizations but also by investing in its facilities and production process to lower the overall impact as much as possible. They even publish a sustainability report, making them accountable for their actions, and I would very much like to see more brands doing this.

Sometimes I hear the opinion that brands only do this to look more sympathetic and sell more watches. While they are indeed a business, I seriously doubt if this is the case. Making a change often comes with significant investments, some of which you never will recuperate in an economic sense, even when you sell significantly more watches because of it (which I doubt). The question is also if these actions are even optional because if a change is not made now, it might be too late, and that is perhaps even the biggest threat to sustaining the business model.

What do you think; should watch brands take more action to lower their own footprint in order to save the environment? Would you stop buying watches from brands that don’t?

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Leveling Up: The Oris Divers Sixty-Five Calibre 400 Chronos Limited Edition https://www.watchtime.com/featured/leveling-up-the-oris-divers-sixty-five-calibre-400-chronos-limited-edition/ https://www.watchtime.com/featured/leveling-up-the-oris-divers-sixty-five-calibre-400-chronos-limited-edition/#respond Thu, 27 Apr 2023 13:43:00 +0000 https://www.watchtime.com/?p=144408 This article was originally published in the March/April 2022 Issue of the WatchTime print magazine.

In early 2022, Oris teamed up with WatchTime’s sister publication Chronos to create a highly limited version of its no-date Divers Sixty-Five model, powered by the brand’s latest in-house movement.

Back in 2015, Oris introduced its first vintage-inspired skin diver, the 40-mm Divers Sixty-Five (Ref. 01 733 7707 4064-07 4 20 18). Its design as well as its name was based on a comparatively generic 36-mm dive watch from 1965 with a manual movement and a water resistance of 100 meters. The recipe immediately proved successful: In the past seven years since its introduction, the Divers Sixty-Five has evolved into a stand-alone collection within the dive watch range of Oris, with almost 40 options currently available, including four different diameters (38, 40, 42 and 43 mm), cases and bracelets in bronze or steel, a chronograph version and consequently up to four different movement choices in total (Sellita SW200-1/510, Oris Calibre 400/401).

While the Divers Sixty-Five was an immediate commercial success, the model’s breakthrough among collectors came a year later with the launch of the Carl Brashear Edition in bronze (Ref. 733 7720 3185 LS), limited to 2,000 pieces. This quickly sold-out model not only earned recognition from collectors, it also introduced a bezel with a diving scale in relief for the first time, while standard models usually came with a printed aluminum insert (one version, the 01 400 7774 4087 from 2021, comes with a ceramic bezel).

The partnership with the Brashear Foundation was later also used to make way for the first chronograph version of the Sixty-Five (Ref. 01 771 7744 3185-Set LS) in 2017/2018, and even served as a base for the introduction of the brand’s Calibre 401 in 2021, with the launch of the third Carl Brashear Limited Edition (Ref. 01 401 7764 3185-Set) with a 40-mm bronze case and small-second indication at 6 o’clock. Oris even became the first watch brand to offer a massive bronze bracelet with the Oris Hölstein Edition in 2020 (Ref. 771 7744 3182-Set).

While the relief bezel has traditionally been reserved for the Brashear editions in bronze, the Divers Sixty-Five Calibre 400 Chronos Limited Edition released in 2022 is therefore the first Sixty-Five in stainless steel to be equipped with this type of bezel. More importantly, it is only the third Sixty-Five to be powered by the brand’s Calibre 400 (or fourth, if you want to count the Brashear’s Calibre 401), and — combined with the slightly larger “10 Years of Mr Porter Limited Edition” from 2021 (Ref. 01 400 7772 4217-Set) — also the most exclusive edition equipped with that movement so far, both being limited to only 200 pieces each. What’s equally remarkable is that Oris and Chronos chose to go with a no-date configuration with an ice blue “dégradé” (gradient) dial with sunburst finish, something that previously was available only within the Aquis range, while the Sixty-Five models typically came with matte dial finishes. Combined with the relief bezel and applied hour markers, the result here can only be described as the most elegant execution to be used in this collection so far (which, most likely, will quickly be nicknamed by fans as “the polar bear” Sixty-Five, factoring in Oris’s bear mascot, which can also be found in the movement’s layout).

Speaking of the movement, Oris’s Calibre 400 is a relatively new movement, first introduced in 2020 within the Aquis range and independently developed by Oris (but produced externally). It aims to set a “new standard for automatic mechanical movements” thanks to its 5-day power reserve (120 hours), high resistance to magnetism, 10-year recommended service intervals and a 10-year warranty (if registered). The automatic caliber is equipped with two barrels (hence the previously mentioned bear shape), a silicon lever and balance wheel, and is wound via an oscillating weight that swings in one direction only without the usual ball bearings, in favor of a less complex sleeve-and-clip attachment. Oris aims to regulate each caliber to “-3/+5 seconds a day, better than a chronometer” and has used more than 30 non-ferrous and antimagnetic components to protect it against magnetic fields. As a result, in tests conducted by Oris, the movement deviated by less than 10 seconds a day after exposure to 2,250 gauss. For context, the latest version of the ISO 764 standard for antimagnetic watches requires that to qualify as antimagnetic, a watch must be accurate to within 30 seconds a day after exposure to 200 gauss. Calibre 400 recorded one third of the deviation allowed after exposure to more than 11 times the force required, making it a highly antimagnetic movement. The finish is perhaps best described as industrial, which underlines the brand’s intention to focus on robustness and function rather than on elegance.

As already noted in previous reviews (see, for example, WatchTime’s test of the AquisPro Date in the October 2021 issue), due to the movement’s design, movements based on the 400 platform occasionally show a tendency to have a jumping-minute hand when the crown is pushed back in, for example, after setting the time. Oris explains this behavior like this, “Since we have little play due to the precision of the construction and tooth design, the effect is more pronounced than with other calibers […] a screw-in crown […] can intensify the phenomenon, as the crown is under more tension (spring) than a normal crown […].” To “reduce this phenomenon,” the company recommends to “turn the crown slightly back and forth before pulling it out or pushing it in.”

Here, the movement is housed in a 38-mm stainless case, which will certainly not only make fans of smaller watches happy, but also anyone with a dislike toward the use of large movement spacer rings: 38 mm is in fact the smallest case diameter to still be able to house the 30-mm caliber.

The fact that the Divers Sixty-Five can only withstand pressure of 100 meters should perhaps be interpreted more as an homage to the model’s history (and as a clear differentiation toward the Aquis and AquisPro models), even if the name “Divers” would suggest a more pressure-resistant case. Swimming and snorkeling at shallow depths shouldn’t pose a problem for the Divers Sixty-Five, and the large screw-down crown, albeit slightly exposed, is both flawless in operation and perfect in feel.

Depending on one’s individual taste, the highly domed curvature along the rim of the sapphire crystal can either be described as a thing of beauty, or something that tends to slightly distort the view of the markings on the domed dial. From a more objective point of view, the proportions of the hands are close to perfect, and the lack of a date window also works in favor of the clean design.

Overall, the Divers Sixty-Five Calibre 400 Chronos Limited Edition is comfortable to wear, thanks to its size, weight distribution and compact proportions. It also manages to keep a certain vintage appeal, while clearly adding a much more elegant appearance. Given the use of the brand’s latest in-house movement, and consequently higher list price, we feel that the riveted steel bracelet (which is the same used for all the Sixty-Five models) would have greatly benefitted from an upgraded clasp with a more refined fine adjustment and, more importantly, quick release spring bars, especially since the watch is being delivered with two strap options.

But what’s perhaps most impressive about this latest version of the Sixty-Five: The Chronos Limited Edition not only demonstrates how versatile the model is, it also provides a more than promising glimpse into the future of the collection, for all those waiting for a slightly larger case size and/or who have not managed to get their hands on one of the 200 pieces of this edition. Interestingly, there is still no regular Divers Sixty-Five with Calibre 400 in the collection.

To learn more about Oris, click here, and to subscribe to the WatchTime print magazine, click here.    

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