Some weeks, like last week, frankly, I look at the crop of new releases hitting my inbox and wonder about the state of things in the watch industry. Everything feels like an iteration, a slight tweak, or an attempt to return to the mean. So we get slightly more luxe Speedmasters (where the pricing immediately becomes the talking point), a cadre of new Defys that have us wondering “Didn’t they already make this one?” and Carreras that hint at the watch community sneaking back to the Big Watch Era.
Is it possible I’m overreacting? Of course. None of the watches mentioned above are bad by any means, in fact all of them are quite good, objectively speaking. It’s just that they don’t represent a ton of creativity or innovation, and when you work in the industry you become attuned to just how rare genuine creativity in watchmaking really is. It makes sense though. This is a business that’s all about selling watches and the biggest brands in the world need to cast a wide net. Big risks when it comes to design can’t reasonably be expected as the norm.
So we turn to the smaller makers, independents and microbrands, hoping they’ll be the ones to wave the proverbial Freak Flag. The new release from Toledano & Chan, the b/1.3r, with a custom made solid gold dial, is the kind of watch you love to come across in the midst of the big guys refreshing product lines and going through the motions.
Their latest introduces a slightly smaller case in blasted titanium, measuring 32mm versus 33.5mm for the previous design. That small change, in a case design that is both squareish and on an integrated bracelet, makes a significant difference in wearability and overall wrist presence, as does the lightness of titanium in the b/1.3r. Anyone who has had a chance to try on a Toledano & Chan watch knows that they don’t wear like a normal watch at all, even a normal integrated bracelet watch. The fit is much more cuff like, by design.
When Toledano & Chan introduced their first piece, the b/1 with a lapis lazuli dial, we were just at the beginning of what we all recognize now as a pretty significant stone dial trend. It could be argued that the brand’s cofounder, Phil Toledano, was himself part of the genesis of that trend, with an Instagram presence that honors what has come to be known as the “Geezer watch,” shorthand, typically, for smaller, dressier watches, often with shaped cases, stone dials, and sometimes gems or diamond accents. Think 70s Piaget as a basic reference point and you begin to get the idea.





