It seems that they won't celebrate their 30th Anniversary, this year? Or did I miss something. You certainly remember the 25th anniversary with an invasion of models celebrating the Lange One: . 10 was way too many. Zero is way too less. Best, Nicolas
The L041.2 in my Richard Lange. A robust caliber this one: very German and generally over-built - exudes confidence. The indirect centre-seconds bridge took me a while to get used to - now I can't imagine the movement without it! Lovely bevelling on it to
So, the third of my Lange family. A straightforward, three-hand movement with sub-seconds. Simple? Yes. Boring? No. Together with the L121.1, one of Lange's clearer three-quarter plate executions - no impediments. The Glashütte ribbing is well-defined and
But, as Tony said: it's very hard to photograph. I make no claims as a photographer with my iPhone and no rig - I suspect you need a lightbox to capture this one well, as some other members here have succeeded at doing better than I. What is clear, howeve
Just to share, for the past two months the Zeitwerk has been firmly on my wrist. It has been such a fantastic experience. I wonder how long the honeymoon period will last 😊
I was scrolling on Insta and suddenly I watched a wire spring on a Lange movement. Being on night shift might cause allucination, so i double checked the official website. Am I still fu@@ up? I took screenshots because I still believe there's something wr
. . . my last watch. And yes, had it on my wrist for the better part of a minute. Many thanks to Ari for making the trip from LA to share his Sidestep for my viewing pleasure. If it's still in his possession a year from now, chances are good it will wind