WatchTime New York is a two-day event. It's the biggest luxury watch show in NYC, and for the fourth year running, it was held in Gotham Hall, a couple of blocks from Bryant Park in midtown.
I showed up for the event after work at around 7 p.m. on Friday, by which point the show had already been running for about two hours.
I wasn't sure what the attire was, so I wore black jeans and a black turtleneck, thinking I couldn't go wrong. A doorman let me into the building, where I was able to check my coat and backpack.
It didn't take long to realize, though, that the standard attire of the evening was far fancier. Attendees were dressed in fancy, borderline black-tie attire.
The interior of the building was stately, with a high, domed ceiling, chandeliers, and warm lighting.
The show is co-hosted by WatchTime, a bi-monthly publication on fine watches, and Watch Anish, a luxury blog and major Instagram presence (1.7 million followers) that primarily covers watches and menswear. I was fortunate enough to be guided through the show first by Rachel, a member of Ana Martins' PR team, and later by Jeremy, a Watch Anish partner.
Upon entering the show itself, I was greeted by a buzz of activity and excitement ... and a large, glimmering bar.
In total, the show had 31 exhibitors, including high horology (that's the study of time) brands like Bovet, MB&F ...
... Breguet, and Greubel Forsey. Each had its own stand and a whole team of experts to display the time pieces.
In addition, independent brands like Romain Gauthier, mid-market brands like Grand Seiko, and groups such as LVMS, Richemont, and Swatch were all represented at the show.
Source: WatchTime New York
Rachel, the PR rep showing me around, told me they were expecting about 1,200 people over the course of the two-day show.
I went for a couple hours on both Friday and Saturday — the latter was far more casual — and found the show to be full of excitement and activity the entire time I was there.
Sources: WatchTime, Watch Anish
Throughout the event, crowds were gathered around many of the exhibitors' stands. What really struck me was how friendly it all was; at times, the event felt more like a reunion of old friends than it did a formal exhibit.
And as for the watches themselves ... they were shiny, they were expensive, they were overwhelmingly Swiss. Some were tucked away in glass exhibits, which was just fine with me, seeing as they cost well into the tens of thousands ...
I even had a chance to try a couple of them on, like the MB&F HM9, which is, according to the company, "reminiscent of a jet engine."
Source: MB&F
It's also, I discovered as the company rep helped me strap it onto my wrist, rather heavy and designed for wrist larger than my own — and, with a price tag of $182,000, an overall remarkable, while intimidating, machine.
The show's crown jewel — or at least its most expensive jewel — was this watch, Be Crazy by Breguet.
Source: Breguet
One theme I heard repeatedly throughout the night was that watch brands succeed when they connect and resonate with customers based on their storytelling. While the exhibit setups were mostly variations on each other, they did all have personal touches that served to best communicate their brand story.
Fiona Kruger, for example, is an independent watchmaker whose stand was set up around the perimeter of the room.
I walked over to say hello, and saw she'd brought along her sketchbooks. I flipped through the pages and got a first-hand look at some of the inspirations and developmental stages behind her designs.
They provided fascinating context for her final designs, which are artistic, eye-catching, and certainly unusual.
And while the watches were noteworthy in their own right, they stood out to me all the more because of the obvious passion with which Kruger herself displayed them, and because I was privy to the thought process that went into them.
And while a brand like Bovet, with its iconic Recital 22 Grand Recital ($632,000), is famous enough to speak for itself ...
Source: Business Insider