Baselworld 2018: Introducing the Tudor 1926 Collection, a New Entry Point Into the Shield
We live in a time when rugged-looking tool watches regularly get paired with formal wear, but then again so do wrinkled work boots, gnarly beards, and worn denim?all of which were once blasphemy at the office or cocktail bar. The Tudor 1926 harkens back to that era when, even if you?d just swum the English Channel or scaled The Matterhorn, you shaved and tuxed up for the evening?s affairs. Meanwhile, your wristwatch?of which you owned just one?needed to withstand rugged adventure while looking downright debonair. I call such timepieces dressy tool watches, or DTWs.
For nearly a century, the Rolex Oyster series (e.g. Datejust, Day-Date, etc) has remained the pinnacle of DTW technology and style, and it follows that Rolex?s little brother Tudor would have also excelled in this surprisingly uncommon category. While the bulk of Tudor?s novelties for Baselworld 2018 are vintage-inspired tool watch classics, Tudor?s 1926 series are pure DTW.
Tudor is boldly marketing the 1926 series to both men and women. To accommodate all wrist sizes and personal preferences, they?re offering the 1926 in 41, 39, 36, and 28mm. Equally gender-bendy is the option to include diamonds in the odd-numeral positions, or not. Add in options like a polished black dial or a waffled silver one, an all-steel or two-tone gold/steel combo, and the 1926 can cover a ton of stylistic ground.
Go for the 41mm in all-steel with a black dial and no diamonds, and you?re flirting with a field watch vib...
-------------------------------- |
|