Blancpain introduces a new 38mm version of its Villeret Ultraplate, including the collection’s first-ever salmon dial, alongside new 29.2mm Villeret Phases de Lune models. The latest additions bring the refined design updates unveiled in 2025 to smaller case sizes while retaining the collection’s hallmark elegance.
These new women’s watches have a flair all their own. With bright or subtle colors, distinctive sparkle, and a perfect fit, these watches offer details that show they were created just for her.
Chanel arrived in Geneva with a wide-ranging program: new case sizes for its J12 classic, the Coco Game haute horlogerie collection, and a spread of permanent and limited editions across virtually every price tier. A snapshot of where the brand stands strategically right now.
With the Classima as a stylish entry into mechanical watchmaking and Joia as a return to the jewelry watch, Baume & Mercier focusing on clear contrasts in 2026.
Cartier unveils a broad lineup for 2026, from the 10th Privé Opus and a new permanent collection to an updated Santos Chronograph, the return of the Roadster, and a reimagined Tortue.
Audemars Piguet introduces the Atelier des Établisseurs, drawing on the historical établissage system to present three highly artisanal creations— Galets, Nomade, and Peacock— each uniting traditional crafts like engraving, enameling, and hand-skeletonization with modern calibers.
With a diamond-set aventurine dial depicting the Aquila constellation, Bell & Ross expands its BR-05 line with a smaller, jewelry-oriented interpretation of its signature “round in a square” design.
With a shimmering “Skyline Blue” mother-of-pearl dial, diamond-set bezel, and in-house automatic caliber with moon phase, Glashütte Original introduces a poetic yet technically accomplished new Serenade Luna.