Each year at Watches & Wonders, we see a handful of novelties that I think can fairly be described as Super Watches. These are the truly audacious creations that are, effectively, out of reach for all but that 1% of the 1% that has the coin and the inclination to buy into something incredibly niche, that’s incredibly expensive, that (honestly) might be years away from actually being produced and successfully delivered. The Grand Seiko Kodo, I think, is a good example of a Super Watch. It stopped everyone in their tracks, had an eye watering price point, and was the ultimate artistic and mechanical expression of the brand that made it. This year had a few Super Watch candidates (including another Kodo) but I think the winner walking away was a watch from A. Lange & Söhne that took the radical step of combining all the things people love about the brand into one watch. A Super Watch, if you will.
The Datograph Perpetual Tourbillon Honeygold “Lumen” was easily my favorite watch name to say aloud during the show. When someone would ask me what my favorite watch of the week was (a question you’re asked about fifty times per day, minimum) I’d reflexively say “Oh, the Lange,” and then continue, probably looking skyward while counting out the watch’s cumbersome title on my fingers, like a school kid figuring out a math problem, “the Datograph, perpetual, tourbillon, lumen,” (I’d always screw it up here) “in honeygold!” I’d be really proud of myself for identifying all of the watch’s key features, even if I made a mistake in the order.
We already told you about the other Lange that made its debut this year, the sedate by comparison Datograph in white gold. The Datograph Perpetual Tourbillon Honeygold “Lumen” is several levels up on the Lange ladder in terms of complexity and rarity. Of course, it’s a Datograph we know and love, but this is the flagship, with a perpetual calendar in addition to the beautifully executed integrated chrono with a trademark big date. Honeygold is a rarely used proprietary alloy that Lange saves for special releases. This is only the 14th time it’s been used. And even fewer watches get the “Lumen” treatment (this is the sixth).