wearing the EPOCH 1936
Didn't expect this kind of finish, honestly. The champagne dial catches the light all day — easily my favorite watch.
That champagne dial was the hardest detail to get right. Honoured it's your favourite, Marcus.
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"The Tank that knows when to disappear."
🎁 Secret GiftA mysterious piece of real value — revealed on arrival.
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1936 was the year Hollywood found champagne. The 1936 sits on silk, on linen, on bare skin in spring, and it never asks for the room. Understated, and somehow the first thing people notice.

The champagne dial catches light before anyone reads the time, and the blue-steel hands give it the weight of something inherited, not bought. Slim enough to slide under a cuff, gold enough to make a plain shirt look deliberate.
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Edward VIII abdicated the British throne in December for the one he loved. Berlin tried to look respectable for the Olympics. In Paris, Cartier was still selling the Tank Louis Cartier that had defined the elegant wrist since 1922, and Fred Astaire was on set filming Swing Time, the film that would define old Hollywood lighting for a generation.
This is the watch from that drawing room: rectangular, restrained, lit by candlelight.

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“It feels like wearing a piece of the year it's named after. The era settles into the wrist, and that's what stays with you.”
“I bought it for the build. The detail is what stays. The dial, the case, the small things you only catch the second time you look.”
“I bought one. A month later I wanted another decade. They turned what was a single purchase into a collection. I wasn't planning to start one.”
Japanese quartz, accurate to 15 sec/month. 3-year battery included.
Every curve studied from the year it carries.
Genuine Italian leather, hand-stitched for all-day comfort.
Each piece carefully inspected and packaged before it ships.
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