Perfect By Design




Every encounter with their watches was like that perfect date with what, on paper, was an amazing person who went to MIT, played the cello, was a jiu-jitsu black belt and did an apprenticeship in Noma’s kitchen, but who in the end was just ‘meh’. But that all changed on August 30th in the year of our Lord two-zero-two-one. Stepping into the Parmigiani Fleurier suite at the Hotel Beau Rivage, I set eyes on a watch that was so mind- blowingly awesome that within two minutes I had bought one. You know that scene in the movies when a guy gets set up on a date and he doesn’t know what to expect? But then she walks into the room and all of a sudden in his head he hears Whitesnake playing, and there’s a spotlight on her because she’s just so damn beautiful? Yes, that’s pretty much what happened to me when I set eyes on the new Parmigiani Fleurier Tonda PF. It is, in essence, an integrated-bracelet steel sports-chic watch with a platinum bezel. But it is also so much more than that. To me, it is an ingenious expression of ultra-subtle micro details used to create a watch that is apparently minimalist yet crazily abundant in extraordinary nuance. It is simply unlike anything else on the market, and its presence on your wrist will make you do a double take, so tantalising is its allure.

So I went to the design team and asked them to tell me what they felt these codes meant to them. Each of them paused for a while, then they started to talk to me about the excellence of the movements or other technical details. And I said, ‘Yes, I agree we have amazing movements, but this is not design’. This started me on a search to identify our design DNA, the source code of our aesthetic vision. Interestingly, the first thing I zeroed in on was the PF, which is a seal that is engraved on our bridges and also appears on our rotors as a symbol of quality. I felt somehow that this symbol, in its wonderfully discreet way, could be the signature for a new family of watches that were at first restrained but at the same time very complex. For me, a watch needs to have this dynamic tension between apparent simplicity and actual complexity, between aggressiveness and elegance; this creates the visual tension which becomes energy in design.”
Read the full story 'Perfect By Design' in Issue 84, available to purchase on TheRake.com and on newsstands worldwide now.
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