It’s always worth celebrating when we see true design artistry and a successful attempt at bringing something wholly unique to the micro-independent watch community. Betina Menescal is the creative mind behind Möels + Co. At 24 years old she is a powerhouse of fresh ideas and is determined to design watches that are completely original. You won’t find a single component in one of her watches, aside from the Sellita movements and straps, in a catalog anywhere. The numerals, the hands, the case, the crystal are all entirely designed by Betina, and manufactured for her alone.
The Designer
To say that Betina comes from an artistic family would be an understatement. There are three opera singers, a children’s musician, and her father, who would turn out to be a great influence for Betina. He was briefly into architecture but quickly moved on to media production. Among his credits: he was a co-director for the movie Anaconda, and produced commercials for the likes of Coca-Cola, Asics, Adidas, and did World Cup commercials for Gillette.
When Betina was nine years old, her father took her on a business trip to Buenos Aires. “My dad didn’t know how to talk to kids. So all he was doing was looking at the buildings and mentioning the architecture here, and the art there. Look at that little detail on the facade or the ceiling.” Betina began to notice that her father had an eye for these details, and how these small features fit into a whole. “It was always a big production with my father. Everything was part of a bigger picture. Even family photos, he couldn’t just take a picture, everything had to be considered.”
Betina’s creativity was entirely encouraged and fostered by her parents. She always explored the arts. In school she received the highest marks in her classes, and her parents were often approached by her classmates’ parents asking why they’d allow her to indulge something perceived as frivolous. “Each time someone would do that,” Betina recalls, “my parents would sever their ties with those parents.” Betina’s mother and father safeguarded her passions, instead of letting them fade over time. “I never had this feeling that the arts would take me somewhere. I will take myself somewhere. You can make it if you want, you just have to make something and be passionate. And if it doesn’t work, make something else. I knew I wanted to do something of my own. I didn’t know what or where,” she said.
After Betina’s first year of university, the pandemic hit, and quarantine started. Through a series of unfortunate circumstances, her parents sold their home in Portugal and moved to Italy, and Betina went to be with them. One day during quarantine her father approached her and asked, “Why don’t we each draw something?”