Cartier
As one of the world’s most prestigious and renowned names in traditional luxury, French Maison Cartier occupies a unique position of respect both as a jeweler since 1847, and as an intensely creative, and category-defining watchmaker since its invention of the pilot watch for Brazilian aviator Alberto Santos-Dumont — now widely acknowledged as one of the earliest known “wristwatches” for men. The modern Santos watch retains many of the signatures of that original groundbreaking reference, along with a wide variety of equally creative and coveted references for both men and women.
Cartier Santos 100 Carbon Watch Hands-On
Cartier Calibre De Cartier Diver Blue Watch Hands-On
Starting Point: Best Dressy Chronograph Watches
Cartier Santos 100 Carbon & Ballon Bleu De Cartier Carbon Watches
aBlogtoWatch eBay Watch Buying Guides: Cartier, Breitling, Beater Watches, & More
Cartier Panther Watches For Women Hands-On
Cartier Clé Automatic Skeleton Watch
Cartier Santos 100 Watch Review
Watch What-If: Iconic Dive Watches In Bronze
Cartier Drive De Cartier Watch Hands-On
Cartier Rotonde De Cartier Astromystérieux Watch
Cartier Rotonde De Cartier Grande Complication Watch Hands-On
Follow aBlogtoWatch At The SIHH 2016 Watch Show January 18-22 With #SIHHABTW
Six Cartier High-Complication Watches For SIHH 2016
Cartier might be best known as a traditional Parisian jewelry maker whose origin story stretches all the way back to 1847, but it was the brand’s innovations in watchmaking that have solidified its enviable legacy of prestige and adulation for the beautiful objects it creates for both men and for women. This was done through what is now known as the Santos — a reference firstly created for Brazilian aviator Alberto Santos-Dumont in 1911, now regarded as the world’s first wristwatch for men.
But the Santos wouldn’t be Cartier’s only historical success — the brand’s modern catalog is filled with iconic references like the category-defining Tank, the striking Crash, the playful Ballon de Cartier, along with incredible pieces that blur the line between high jewelry and functional horological art from the Panthere Jewelry collection. And though much of its more traditional design language might still hearken to the golden era of the Parisian art deco period, Cartier’s watchmaking signatures maintain a relentless pursuit of quiet innovation, clever detailing, and the celebration of incredible craftsmanship for anything bearing the brand’s "secret signature."