If you’ve never had the pleasure of attending a Windup Watch Fair in person, it’s hard to express the energy in the room or the unavoidable concentration of enthusiasm that greets you when you step through the doors. From the moment the show opens on Friday to the minute it closes on Sunday, every Windup is a marathon of excited conversation, new friends, and constant discovery — all bound by a vague sense of risk, a sense that (if you should stop and stare for a little too long) you may be walking out of Windup with something new tucked away in your bag and a slightly lighter wallet.
Of course, for all their similarities, no two Windups are the same. The character of each host city plays a huge part in this — it’s hard to quantify the difference between a bay-side view in San Francisco in May and a downtown October day in New York City — but throw in different brands, different people, different venues, and (possibly most importantly) different watches and you’ll find that every Windup comes with the distinct chance to surprise.
So, to that end, with a few days between me and the end of Windup Chicago 2024, I thought I would take a moment to fill you in on some of the watches and moments that surprised me at this summer’s hottest watch fair.
NATO’s Don’t Need Holes
It seems like a fitting place to start this endeavor would be with the only booth at Windup Chicago that got me to pull out my wallet not once, but twice. Like so many of us, I go absolutely nuts for a good NATO-style strap. I have drawers littered with them, and they are a consistent part of my wrist-borne apparel.
If I were to be honest with myself, I hardly have a need for more NATO straps in my life, but since this isn’t a hobby that tends to correlate with that kind of brutal level of self-honesty, I constantly have my eyes open for new and great fabric straps. I first encountered Spring Made straps back at Windup San Francisco in May, but (as can happen in the sometimes overwhelming halls of Windup) I really didn’t get to spend any time looking at the straps up close.
Once I finally did at Windup Chicago, it was game over, and I left this summer’s show with a trio of Spring Made straps, none of which took long to find semi-permanent homes between the lugs of appropriate watches. The big selling point of the Spring Made straps is the complete adjustability that comes thanks to its friction-fit hardware, eliminating the need for predetermined sizing.
It’s an elegant solution to a problem that can be incredibly frustrating, and so far I’m really enjoying these straps. I will admit that it takes some time to figure out the best method for tightening them — it can be very easy to accidentally loosen the strap when you go to lock it down, at least at first — but it didn’t take all that long to get the whole thing sorted out, and a week in, I’m absolutely loving these straps. I may even need to get more.
Am I Into PVD Watches?
One of my big blind spots over the fifteen years I’ve been collecting watches has been black cases. It’s not that I don’t appreciate them from a design standpoint, but I just haven’t been able to make PVD or DLC-cased watches stick in my own collection. And so it goes that, every couple of years, I pick up a nice DLC watch, wear it for a few months, and let it go. In 2024, it seems that itch is creeping back.
Thankfully, a quick wander around Venue West offered up some compelling options for those drawn in by the idea of something matte and black on the wrist. Foremost among these is the Lorier Hydra III Zulu, a watch that has had my attention since it launched last year, and — though I keep screwing up and missing the drops — the 1980s action movie-inspired GMT still draws me in every time I see it.