My pocket watch collection has grown in the past few years. In addition to these I have an 1883 Illinois Model 1 on its way to me from a fellow collector in Texas.
Top row from left: 1887 Illinois Model 2 grade 5, 1904 Illinois Model 6 Bunn Special, 1917 Illinois Model 6 grade 89 (my great granddad's)
Middle row: 1903 Hamilton 940, 1926 Hamilton 992, 1954 Elgin B.W. Raymond.
Bottom row: 1920 Illinois Santa Fe Special model 1 grade 274, 1773 Jos. Johnson, Illinois model 9 Bunn Special, 1885 Elgin Dexter St.
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I have a lot of time on my hands.Where did you find the time to collect all those?
I'm impressed! Some really cool pieces there!My pocket watch collection has grown in the past few years. In addition to these I have an 1883 Illinois Model 1 on its way to me from a fellow collector in Texas.
Top row from left: 1887 Illinois Model 2 grade 5, 1904 Illinois Model 6 Bunn Special, 1917 Illinois Model 6 grade 89 (my great granddad's)
Middle row: 1903 Hamilton 940, 1926 Hamilton 992, 1954 Elgin B.W. Raymond.
Bottom row: 1920 Illinois Santa Fe Special model 1 grade 274, 1773 Jos. Johnson, Illinois model 9 Bunn Special, 1885 Elgin Dexter St.
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Very classy!Maybe this thread inspired me... Just purchased a watch today, a modern watch but made by local watch maker here in Calgary who sells them at markets, I think to some degree he assembles pieces rather than being a watchmaker from scratch... Anyway paid half price for it at $60... I already have a Timex watch I wear, I always wear a watch when out of the house!
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Very classy!
Sweet group of timepieces, Drew! I had one of the first Seiko digitals, sans alarm. Great watch, wore it daily for years. A battery finally leaked and trashed it. But I appreciate the whole line of Japanese watches, I've a Pulsar day/date worn as a daily until I got the Citizen chrono.I'm a fan of Citizen and Casio, and Japanese watches in general.
Nice collection. Is that box something you made, or?I'll play along, this is a fun thread resurrection.
Until a couple years ago I was not a watch wearer at all. I had a nice Citizen quartz diver in college in the early 1990s, but it was lost in maybe 1992 (left it on a pool table and gonzo). Since then I didn't bother to wear a watch. In early 2019 I got into it again -- like I needed another money-sink hobby -- and have worn a watch daily. My current little collection:
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I'm a fan of Citizen and Casio, and Japanese watches in general. Before this last go-round I had no idea that Casio made anything other than cheap plastic watches. The chrono at the bottom left is a JDM Casio and one of my favorites. Just does everything so well.
The pocket watches all have family connections in some way. The silver one with the cover is a modern quartz my wife bought me. Clockwise from there are:
1939 Hamilton 912 (grandfather)
1899 Hamilton 924 (dad's uncle)
1907 Illinois (relative of my grandmother, her mother or aunt -- I really should have written it down when she told me)
The small Hamilton belonged to my grandfather, my grandmother's second husband. He was the one that introduced me to British cars with his MG TD. This watch is particularly neat as he kept the box, warranty paper, pen knife, and chain. It's so like him to have kept all this, and it's a nice reminder of him.
All of the old pocket watches do work, but they do all need a service. I've found a good watchmaker down in the city, need to get them in for a service one of these days.
I bought this only because it was a nice looking watch (quartz movement) that had a bit of a Breitling Navitimer vibe, without the 5k price tag.Stührling is an American company founded in 1999 in New York that designs and sells watches and their accessories. The company revived the name of master watchmaker Max Stührling, who lived in Switzerland in the late 1800s.[1][2] Chaim Fischer is the founder of the brand.[3] The company claims to adhere to "Swiss standards of watchmaking"[4] but its watches are not actually Swiss Made.
I bought it off of Etsy (ChadFloydWoodworks). Made from reclaimed wood. I wanted something nice and not stamped out in a factory. It also limits my watch collection, Keeps me to just the 10 slots or I'd be tempted to have more.Nice collection. Is that box something you made, or?
So now I know what to get you for Christmas - another boxI bought it off of Etsy (ChadFloydWoodworks). Made from reclaimed wood. I wanted something nice and not stamped out in a factory. It also limits my watch collection, Keeps me to just the 10 slots or I'd be tempted to have more.
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Looks like some nice workmanship.I bought it off of Etsy (ChadFloydWoodworks). Made from reclaimed wood. I wanted something nice and not stamped out in a factory. It also limits my watch collection, Keeps me to just the 10 slots or I'd be tempted to have more.
For me watches and guns are much more fun than the stock market
Illinois built one of the finest watches around back in the day. Rugged, reliable, and accurate. No, unfortunately the original key did not come with it, that would have been a cool addition to it. I happen to have a full set of watch keys though.Must agree with ya, Walt. And that the Illinois still works is no surprise. Built simply and rugged as a tank! Did the original key come with it?
Thanks Bas.That's a real beauty, Walt!