But what’s really interesting to me about the Anatom isn’t the watch itself, even though I like it quite a bit. It’s the prospect of watches from the 80s (or even the 90s) being the subjects of the next phase of vintage inspired design. Are we as a watch community (and a sub-community of aging millennials) ready for this?
Personally, I think I am. As I’ve gotten older, I feel like I better understand the environment I grew up in, which is to say, an environment completely dominated by Baby Boomers and their obsession with the 1960s. In the 1990s, we saw a glut of media looking back thirty or so years to the 60s, when the Boomers, our parents, were young, free, and completely unencumbered by mortgages and a 9-5 lifestyle. My favorite example of this particular flavor of nostalgia is to look at the films of Oliver Stone through the mid-80s to the 90s: Platoon, Born on the 4th of July, The Doors, JFK. This is the work of a man compulsively looking back, and it mirrors other pieces of Boomer nostalgia from the time period in everything from The Wonder Years to The Beatles Anthology.
The trend of vintage inspired watches doesn’t line up with this type of nostalgia exactly (if it did, the Black Bay would have been the watch of the 1990s) but I think there’s reason to believe that as tastes evolve in the watch community, we might see a more pronounced look back on the 80s and 90s. It stands to reason, I think, that as a new generation of top level decision makers take the reins at big Swiss brands, when they decide to look back on something, they’ll pull from a past that is familiar to them. That’s going to be the 1980s and 90s in many cases. I don’t know who the Oliver Stone-like figure in the watch industry might turn out to be, but it’s not out of the question that as millennials age, have more disposable income, and simultaneously take on a greater level of creative control, the vintage inspired watches of the not too distant future will look very different from those of the recent past.
To be clear, I don’t think that the vintage inspired watches we’ve come to know over the course of the last decade are going anywhere anytime soon. These watches are popular because the designs are basically timeless. You wouldn’t hear much of an argument from me if you claimed that the dive watch, at a basic level, was perfected in the 1960s. There’s no real need to reinvent something that is so profoundly unbroken. But we’re at a point where you can’t really do much more when it comes to pulling from those midcentury design codes. It feels like just about every permutation has been tried, and enthusiasts can get almost anything they want in this genre, from direct 1:1 recreations to reinterpretations that tweak things in any number of ways.
Moving on, collectively, to another period seems inevitable, and I’m curious how watch designers and brands handle iconic watches and design tropes from an era that is not looked upon as fondly, historically, by collectors. The 1980s and 90s have often been a punchline in serious collector circles, but I think there are gems to explore and plenty of cool ideas to mine. If two-tone really is on its way back (something that has been threatened for years without a whole lot of substance) the 80s feels like the right playing field to reinterpret or expand on those ideas. We’ve also seen a shift in interest recently toward smaller, dressier watches that are often a lot flashier than the tool watches of the 1960s that have served as reliable inspiration for years. If stone dials and cocktail watches are the new generic black dialed divers, we could be in for a really fun period of invention.