Internet Horology Club 185
Most beautiful movements...what are your opinions
March 22, 2013, 00:06
Kevin MoodieMost beautiful movements...what are your opinions
I'm sort of partial to the Waltham model 1888
March 22, 2013, 00:11
Kevin MoodieAnother
March 22, 2013, 00:12
Kevin MoodieAnd a final model 1888
March 22, 2013, 12:39
Richard M. JonesKevin those watches have been recalled as unsafe by the U. S. Department of disinformation. You should pack them up and mail them to me for proper disposal! Absolutely beautiful and the tadpole regulator is a gem on a par with my Hampden golf club stuff. Thanks for showing them.
Deacon
November 25, 2013, 09:08
Ken HabeebThus far I would award first prize to Buster, second to Eric. Honorable mentions to several others. Stumbled onto this at 5 am and woke up pretty quick!

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November 25, 2013, 10:29
Jim WalzHere is one of my personal favorites. It is an 18 size Hamilton Special.
November 25, 2013, 11:24
Ken HabeebYes, with a very nice ray pattern and gold screws, that's beautiful.
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November 25, 2013, 14:35
William D. WhiteFor elegance of design, the finest hand work and outright technical excellence, it's hard to beat the simplistic beauty of the high grade Swiss movement.
William
November 25, 2013, 14:35
William D. WhiteAnother. These images were lifted from Steve G's website:
http://ninanet.net/watches/launchpad.htmlI trust he won't mind as they are for educational purposes.
November 25, 2013, 15:09
Harry J. Hyaduck Sr.Personally I can not make a choice. Everyone here has shown you examples of beautiful watches. I agree with each and every one of them. One of my least favorite types of movements are the guilt but even those can be stunning. If the guilt is bright and shiny and it has dark blue screws as some of the Hampden's do they can be gorgeous. I even have a 7 jewel size 18 Elgin I purchased for the hunter case but the movement looked brand new so I never separated them. So each watch has something special about them to me.
November 26, 2013, 03:12
William D. WhiteThis is my favorite American movement...from my own very small collection: A top grade 23 jewel Bunn Special from 1923. Accurate, rugged, reliable, ornate and beautiful!
William
November 26, 2013, 21:53
Andy Schwartzgot this one today
November 26, 2013, 22:16
Lorne WasylishenAs much as I like damaskeening a Keystone Howard can make me forget it was ever used.
November 26, 2013, 23:31
David AbbeThe Waltham Model 1888 is also one of my personal favorites for countless reasons. This Two-Tone Riverside (movement close up and a somewhat clumsy collage) passed through my collection a few years ago . . .
November 27, 2013, 10:00
Roger StephensI love the frosted movements!!
Roger
November 27, 2013, 10:09
Tom BruntonI love the simple elegance and spectacular quality of the Ulysse Nardin HS2 Chronometer grade watch from WW2 ,and although I have the brass cradle thereof it mounts in,I am still missing the deck watch box to hold it. Many's the young sailor in wartime who owed their lives and the safety of their ships to beauties like this,as well as the Hamilton Model 22.Remarkably both my Nardin and my 22 Hamilton keep time with my computer almost to the second even after all these years

November 27, 2013, 10:21
Ethan LipsigMost beautiful? I can't answer that, but I will show five candidates.
The first is this lovely JJ Badollet.
November 27, 2013, 10:21
Ethan LipsigThe second is this very pretty Touchon.
November 27, 2013, 10:22
Ethan LipsigThe third is C.H. Meylan SS#37.
November 27, 2013, 10:25
Ethan LipsigI don't want to leave the British/Northern Irish out. So, another nominee is this Sharman D. Neill karussel (the escapement rotates -- same concept as a tourbillon, but different mechanism).
November 27, 2013, 10:29
Ethan LipsigAnd not to leave low-end U.S. watches out, my last candidate is likely the highest grade watch New York Standard ever made, its scarce 15 jewel convertible.
November 27, 2013, 12:26
Patrick WallinI personalty like the Rockford's and it's not because I am from Rockford or because my family sold watches I just think Rockford's have a unique design that they always took to the next level. My uncle Stan was a Elgin educated, Rockford employee and I can remember some of the fantastic, beautiful masterpieces he would bring home too work on.
November 27, 2013, 13:16
Francesco Marco MaraschinHere is my favorite American movement
[not mine]
November 27, 2013, 13:18
Francesco Marco MaraschinHere is another 1892
November 27, 2013, 13:20
Francesco Marco MaraschinJust one more
[I got these pics off the ihc, but I cant remember who's watches they are]