Hamilton also resurrected a watch from its past with the new, contemporary version of its Hamilton Pan Europ, one of the very first wristwatches equipped with an automatic chronograph movement.
Breitling expanded its Bentley collection with the new Breitling for Bentley 6.75 Midnight Carbon, a tribute to the famous 6.75-liter Bentley engine that powers Bentley’s Mulsanne limousines.
Hublot gave a peek at the three new watches in its Big Bang Ferrari collection, including the Hublot Big Bang Ferrari Titanium Carbon (pictured below), limited to 1,000 pieces.
The headline on this feature says: “A Look Back At Baselworld 2014: 19 [NINETEEN] Interesting New Watches We’ve Seen.” HOWEVER, I only see photos of nine watches with nine accompanying written descriptions in the article following the aforementioned headline. Have I missed something?
The Omega and Hamilton are too 70s in their case design, in my opinion. The Hublot and Bulgari are just not tasteful. But to each his own!
Where is rolex
the title said “interesting”
I love the new Omega grey dial watch. I notice the beautiful BVLGARI and several watches in the April edition of WatchTime have the date situated evidently for those wearing their watches on the left wrist. I and many others I see wear their watches on the right wrist, which means if buyers are fussy, they won’t buy watches intended for the left wrist if they are right-wrist wearers.
Why not place dates in a neutral position?
That Hublot… cringing. Is it designed for gangsta rappers?