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Picture of Dr. Debbie Irvine
posted May 10, 2012 07:41

Simply gorgeous!

Smile
 
posted May 13, 2012 21:23
Thanks Debbie. Smile

The chart below is the 1904 catalog showing serial numbers by Model assignment. The red arrow shows the 200,000 numbers blocked out for the Model 5. Remember, by this point the company had been making watches for nearly 20 years, and the serial numbers had yet to reach the million-mark. In another 10 years the company would stop pocket watch production entirely, so I question if they actually produced the 3 million watches they were supposed to have made.

 
posted May 13, 2012 21:26
The blue arrow in the above chart identifies the run into which this next watch falls. Notice that from SN 10,000 where the Model 1 leaves off up to SN 100,000 there is only Models 2 (hunter), 3 (3/4 plate OF), and 4 (KW OF).

My thanks to our own Jon Hart for this example, a gilt Model 2, SN 88645:

 
posted May 13, 2012 21:27
Another interesting lever-set 16-jewel movement with no center jewel on the dial side:

Note the Adjusted marking on the pillar plate next to the balance.

 
posted May 13, 2012 21:31
Protected by a fantastic gold-filled hunter case supplied by IHC185's own Rob Jones:

 


posted May 13, 2012 22:23
Eric,

Is that the movement you purchased from me on IHC?

WoW!
 
posted May 25, 2012 14:07
Yes Jon, and thank you - it now has a new dial, re-blued hands, and a period-correct hunter case.

Below is a 1909 advert for the Grade 36 Model 8:

Again note the half-headed case screws and the lack of a dust band.

 
posted May 25, 2012 14:10
The 7-jewel pinstripe New Eagle movement was one of the most common of the lesser grades.

Thanks to our own Andy Schwartz for this example:

 
posted May 25, 2012 14:12
Fronting it is a very unusual metal Arabic dial:

 
posted June 13, 2012 22:19
-

 
posted June 13, 2012 22:22
Here is yet another variant of the Grade 182, and this time it's circles-and-rosettes with a center checkerboard:

 
posted June 13, 2012 22:23
Fronting it is the black-only Arabic Gothic dial with open morning-glory hands:

 
posted June 13, 2012 22:24
Fully protected by an Arm & Hammer case:

 
posted July 01, 2012 17:07
The rarest Maiden Lane of them all was the 21-jewel variant. Available in two separate runs of 20 and 60, for a total of 80 ever made, the earlier patterns had no jewel count, some runs simply had the letter "J" after the "21", while the later runs had the word "jewel" spelled out.

 
posted July 01, 2012 17:08
Fronting it is the standard Arabic dial with matching spade-and-poker hands:

 
posted July 01, 2012 17:09
All wrapped up in a stunner of a Philadelpiha case:

 
posted July 03, 2012 17:40
An ad from the 1908 catalog, showcasing more of the Model 8:

 
posted July 03, 2012 17:42
In the above ad this watch would've fetched a mere $6.65 back in the day:

 
posted July 03, 2012 17:44
Another two-tone 17-jewel pattern Model 8 from the incredibly prolific design engineers at Seth Thomas:

 
posted July 03, 2012 17:45
Wrapped up in a lesser 10-year Supreme case:

 
posted August 07, 2012 22:16
An ad for Models 8 and 9, open-face and hunter, respectively, showing an 11-jewel variant. It's a standard 7-jewel watch with 4 extra jewels in the top plate only.

 
posted August 07, 2012 22:17
Here is an example of an 11-jewel Model 8 in a two-tone pattern:

 
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