The names are almost as well known as the brands they founded, revived, or run today: Biver, Blumlein, Cologni, Daniels, Hayek, Heuer, Golay, LeCoultre, Macaluso, Meylan, Mille, Muller, Lange, Schnyder, and Stern. There are far too many big names in watchmaking to list, without creating an extended table or creating a sort of Table of Nations, but exclusive to watchmaking. This is not an academic exercise because some of these names are still active in watchmaking today.
In the last great era of watchmaking, some collectors and journalists might have been lucky enough to have walked the halls of Jaeger-LeCoultre with Gunther Blumlein himself. Others will perhaps have enjoyed a passionate diatribe from Nicholas Hayek Sr. Still others will have found themselves drawn to the magnetic Luigi Macaluso as he held court at the SIHH. Of course, in recent years most of us have been privileged to know and hear from the great Jean-Claude Biver, often hailed as one of watchmaking’s last living legends. Another such legend is Walter von Känel, who for more than 50 years was synonymous with Longines. The former Swiss army officer recently retired as CEO of the brand, becoming Honorary Chairman of Longines, while retaining his position as Chairman of the Longines Foundation.
Various editors of this title have had the pleasure of interacting with von Känel over the years, including myself (although for another publication), and you have read about him in these pages on more than one occasion. He is certainly not a man who projects his image across the world of watches in the same way that his former colleague at Swatch Group Biver does. This is not to say von Känel cannot project forcefully - the man could certainly make you sit up and pay attention, but he did it without being overbearing.
This story is from the Issue 57 edition of WOW Singapore.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 57 edition of WOW Singapore.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Hand-Finished Ceramic
Once thought impossible, Blancpain demonstrates how to bring handcraftsmanship to ceramic cases and bracelets with the Fifty Fathoms Bathyscaphe Quantième Complet Phases de lune 5054
Quanta Of Time
Just as hours, minutes and seconds are quanta of time, so too are days, weeks, months and years. We finally explore the story of the perpetual calendar in particular, in a year that invites such ruminations
Twice Upon A Time
The world's greatest double tourbillon wristwatch, the Breguet Classique 5345 Quai de L'horloge is back, with new hand-finishing touches
Coming In Thin
Bvigari’s releases for 2024 continue to stun the watch world with its trail-blazing innovation and sublime artistry
Light The Night
Luminox celebrates 35 years of existence by drawing on its heritage in the realms of the air, land and sea
New Frontiers
The outgoing CEO of TAG Heuer Julien Tornare shares his management style and values. No doubt these will remain consistent in his new role as Hublot CEO, just as they were in his Zenith tenure
Delighting To Surprise
Tissot CEO Sylvain Dolla weighs in on the novelties of 2024
Machine Learning
The mechanical calendar has been perfected over the last 100 years; it remains a challenge that invites multiple watchmaking and engineering approaches. We get into the nuts and bolts of how the perpetual calendar gets the job done
STRUCTURAL STYLE
Parmigiani Fleurier CEO Guido Terreni explains the logic of the new Toric collection and takes us through his thoughts on style and elegance
THE CONVERSATION: APROPOS COMPLICATIONS
A watch with complications appeals to different sorts of collectors, and is quite different to a complex watch. The editors of Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand discuss the virtues of all sorts of complications and consider when more is really better...