Tag: crown

Glossary of Watch Terms

From bezel to tourbillon, the key timepiece definitions you need to know…

Automatic Movement: A type of mechanical watch movement that does not require manual winding. Instead, the rotor (or part of the automatic mechanism) is pulled by gravity which effectively winds the mainspring with every movement of your hand. This is also called a self-winding movement.

Automatic Watch: A watch with a mainspring that is wound by every movement of your hand throughout the day. This type of movement is also referred to as an automatic or self-winding movement.

Bezel: The outer ring that surrounds the watch face.

Caliber: The number and letter assigned to a watch model type.

Case: The outer covering of metal that encloses the inner-workings of the watch.

Caseback: The underside of the watch case that rests on your wrist.

Chronograph: A specific type of stopwatch with a sweeping second hand that can start, stop and reset with a push of the stem. Modern watches with this feature are frequently called chronographs themselves.

Chronometer: A special designation for a precision watch that has met the rigorous accuracy standards at varying temperatures and positions set by an official institute in Switzerland.

Complication: A watch with additional non-timekeeping functions. Examples of complications include a chronograph, tourbillon, perpetual calendar.

Crown: The knob on the outside watch case that is used to set the time and date. For mechanical watches, the crown is also used to wind the watch’s mainspring. The crown may also be referred to as the stem, pin, winder or winding stem.

Dial: The watch face that displays the time. A dial can also be simply called the face.

Flyback Hand: The second hand of the chronograph that can be used to time laps or multiple competitors in a race. This flyback complication allows you to reset the time on the stopwatch without having to stop the chronograph.

Jewels: Synthetic rubies or sapphires that function as bearings inside a mechanical watch to reduce internal friction and wear and increase accuracy.

Key Set: An early style of watch that was set with a small key instead of a crown.

Mainspring: The power source of a mechanical watch made of a tightly coiled (usually steel) spring. A watch effectively stores its energy in the mainspring which slowly unwinds as the clock’s wheels turn.

Manual Wind: A watch that must be wound by hand (via the crown) every day.

Mechanical Movement: A watch movement that relies on a mainspring (and not a quartz crystal) as its power source. The mainspring can be wound by hand (manual wind) or with the wearer’s natural motion as in an automatic movement.

Moon-phase: A watch face window that displays the moon’s current phase in the sky.

Movement: The watch’s inner mechanics that collectively keep time. Two main classifications of movements are mechanical and quartz.

Perpetual Calendar: A calendar display that accounts for months with varying lengths and the leap year.

Power Reserve: The amount of energy the watch has cached until it stops running.

Power Reserve Indicator: A small gauge on the dial that measures how much longer the watch can run before needing to be wound again.

Quartz Crystal: A synthetic piece of quartz that steadily oscillates at a rate of 32.768 times per second and is used within quartz movements to power the watch.

Quartz Movement: A watch movement that uses a battery and tiny piece of synthetic quartz crystal in lieu of a mainspring. When an electric current passes through quartz, the crystal oscillates with near-perfect frequency and becomes the ideal constant to measure time against.

Rotating Bezel: A bezel (or the outer ring that surrounds the watch face) that spins to perform different functions like measuring elapsed time or calculating distance and speed.

Rotor: A flat, semi-circular piece of metal, attached to a winding mechanism, inside an automatic watch that winds the mainspring as the wearer moves throughout the day.

Screw-Lock Crown: A special crown that fully screws into the watch case to make the watch water-tight.

Skeleton Case: Also called a skeleton watch, this is a watch with a transparent case (either the front or back) to showcase the watch’s movement.

Subdial or Subsidiary Dial: Refers to the small dials on the watch face that can serve a variety of purposes including keeping track of seconds, elapsed time, moon phases or, as on calendar watches, the month, date or day of the week.

Tourbillon: Depending on the position of a watch, gravity can accelerate or slow the rotation of the watch’s wheel and alter its accuracy. The highly complicated tourbillon is a mechanical watch device designed to nullify gravity’s effects by mounting the escapement (or time-keeping element like a pendulum) and balance wheel in a rotating cage.

Winding: The operation by which the mainspring of a watch is tightened. A watch can be wound manually by turning the crown or, in the case of automatic watches, via a rotor which swings as the wearer’s arm moves throughout the day.

5 Expensive Jewelry Gifts

In the spirit of gift-giving season we took a look at some of the most expensive jewelry gifts ever given. From anonymous splurges to priceless royal gifts, there’s no shortage of pricey gemstones throughout history. Check out our five favorite lavish gifts.

5. Star of the East — $11.9 million

The Star of the East made its way to England as a wedding gift. Initially the stone belonged to the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II. After the Sultan was deposed in 1909, the diamond was sold by Cartier in Paris. Evalyn Walsh, the daughter of miner and gold prospector, was on her honeymoon. After three months traveling through Europe and the Middle East, Walsh and her husband found themselves at Cartier Paris. She immediately fell in love with the 94.8-carat diamond, but had spent all of her money on their vacation. Walsh’s father later settled the payment as an additional wedding gift.

4. Emerald and Diamond Tiara — $12.7 million

This diamond and emerald tiara from 1900 belonged to Princess Katharina Henckel von Donnersmarck, member of a noble German family. The tiara features 11 Colombian emeralds weighing over 500 carats which were originally owned by a Maharaja of India. The tiara was a wedding gift to Princess Katharina from her husband-to-be Guido Count von Henckel.

3. Chopard Watch — $25 million

Though this watch was bought anonymously, it is known that the piece was meant as a gift for one lucky woman. The Chopard creation is not only one of the most expensive gifts, but it’s also one of the most expensive watches ever made. Doubling as a jewelry piece, the watch features a 15-carat heart-shaped pink diamond, a 12-carat heart-shaped blue diamond, an 11-carat heart-shaped white diamond and an additional 163 smaller white and yellow diamonds.

d it’s made of a 15-carat pink diamond, a 12-carat blue diamond and an 11-carat white diamond. They also used some white gold and some yellow gold, and, of course, 163 carats of smaller diamonds, coming to a total of 201 carats

2. The Cullinan Diamond — $400 million

The Cullinan diamond is now 9 different stones that are used in different items of the British royal collection. However, the original diamond, so massive it could be broken down into 9 different pieces, was sent to England whole. The trip over was a security risk and a ship was sent with English security aboard while a package was in a safe in the captain’s quarters. However, this was merely a diversion and the actual diamond was simply sent in the mail. The uncut diamond, a total of 3,106 carats, was gifted by the South African government — an English colony at the time — to King Edward VII for his 66th birthday.

1. The Koh-i-Noor — Priceless

It’s believed that the Koh-i-Noor was first mined in the 1300s at a mine in Golconda, India. It weighed 793 carats before cutting and 105.6 after being cut twice. The legendary stone is believed by some to be a gift from Surya, the Hindu sun god and that the stone has magical powers. The first mention of the diamond came in 1304 after being recorded as a spoil of the battle of Malawah. Then, in 1526, the diamond was mentioned again when the Mongols were in possession of the stone. This is when the Emperor’s jeweler cut the stone poorly and reduced it’s size from nearly 800 carats to 186 carats.

Through many more battles and wars, the stone changed hands several times. The King of Afghanistan, Ahmed Shah maintained possession. He was deposed of his thrown and went to the maharaja of India asking for help in returning to power. As part of the deal, the maharaja asked for the Koh-i-Noor as payment. After the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1839, the Sikh empire lacked leadership, allowing the British empire to enter and colonize the region by 1849. The colonial governor had the new, 13-year-old maharaja Duleep Singh gift the Koh-i-Noor to the British Queen Victoria in 1850.

The diamond has never changed hands through a sale and has no estimated value — it’s believed to be a priceless artifact of history. The diamond is one of the most imporant and valued stones of the British Crown Jewels. The value of the entire collection is estimated around $673.88 billion.


Photo Credit: sothebys.com / famousdiamonds.tripod.com / forbes.com / britishempire.co.uk / nymag.com