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Way more so than a vintage one now days.![]()
Oh yes they are. The vintage ones command thousands.
Way more so than a vintage one now days.![]()
Perregauxs were high quality watches back then. They are still high quality watches that aren't cheap. The brand is one of those well kept secrets of the watch collector's world.![]()
Yes, since they're not as well known to the general public as some other high quality watches, you can still find a great deal on one on eBay. I got this one about ten years ago at an auction in northern California for twenty-five bucks, and while it's overdue for a cleaning and oiling, it still keeps perfect time.
And while I'm on a roll with wristwatch show & tell, here are a couple of other vintage watches from my collection:
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I found the Raketa when we were living in Amsterdam. N.O.S. and it cost me 25 euro. BTW, twenty-five bucks is, by choice as well as necessity, the most I'll pay for a watch. Keeps me from having way too many watches.
The prices must be cheap there. I have to pay $35.![]()
A watch you paid $65 for? Must be a nice watch.Well, when you consider the dollar/euro exchange rate at the time, the Raketa worked out to about 32 bucks, so we're not that far apart.
And as for my 25 buck rule, I have to admit I've broken it a few times but not by much. Except for a watch that I got on eBay a couple of months ago - I went to $65 because it was a watch that I really, really wanted. The only way I could justify it was by making an agreement with myself that I'd sell a watch or two to make back the money. I'll shoot a couple of pix of it after supper and post them forthwith. It's really sweet.
I found the Raketa when we were living in Amsterdam. N.O.S. and it cost me 25 euro. BTW, twenty-five bucks is, by choice as well as necessity, the most I'll pay for a watch. Keeps me from having way too many watches.
Yes, since they're not as well known to the general public as some other high quality watches, you can still find a great deal on one on eBay. I got this one about ten years ago at an auction in northern California for twenty-five bucks, and while it's overdue for a cleaning and oiling, it still keeps perfect time.
And while I'm on a roll with wristwatch show & tell, here are a couple of other vintage watches from my collection:
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Not quite as vintage, but this Russian Raketa is still a cool mechanical watch. Raketa is one of the few watch companies that made watches with 24 hour analog dials (confusing as hell to try to read at a glance). The second crown rotates the outer dial with the names of major world cities in Cyrilic. I feel like a vintage spy when I wear this one...
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A watch you paid $65 for? Must be a nice watch.
I can usually find a decent amount of 50s wristwatches or $35 each.![]()
Not only did I pay 65 bucks ($67.75 to be exact) for it, it doesn't even run. Fortunately the mainspring and balance staff are just fine - in fact it'll run for a few minutes now and then, so I'm pretty sure all it needs is to be cleaned and oiled. Still, it's another 100 bucks or so.
Way older than 50s, though - prolly 1920s. I've become interested in early wristwatches, particularly the size 0 conversions and transitionals, and the wide variety of factory styles and sizes that immediately followed - a time when watch companies were trying to figure out what people wanted in these new-fangled wristwatches. A lot of the watches from the 20s and 30s were small by today's standards - which is a plus for me because I have fairly thin wrists . F'rinstance, this Elgin is only 30mm in diameter and 35mm to the ends of the lugs.
I had to have this watch because not only is the case really beautiful (and in near-mint condition), I love dials with Arabic numerals that tilt as they go round. They always seem a bit Alice-In-Wonderland to me.
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The serial number is 31080894.
I'm definitely going to have it cleaned and oiled, maybe soon, depending on how this week's eBay sales go. I've got a bunch of cigarette cases and holders up now and I think some of them might do well.
Over the past year or so I've scored a couple of nice size 0 wristwatches that have movements that are prolly not worth repairing, but the cases are near-mint. Also scored several size 0 movements that I think only need cleaning. Three of them have fancy dials - two of which I'm going to put in the two wristwatches, have them cleaned, and hopefully turn a profit on them since fancy dial wristwatches seem to be desirable and pricey at the moment. Of course, if I make enough of one of them, I can afford to keep the other...