Two-tone—a moniker given to watches that come in a combination of gold and steel, most often extending to the bracelet design—is poised for a renaissance. Since its heyday in the 1980s, it has long ...
Timepieces in a combination of gold and steel, first popular during the 1970s and ’80s, are helping brands maintain revenues even as sales decline. By Nazanin Lankarani When a Rolex diving watch goes ...
Is there any style of watch more associated with the 1980s than two-tone? The steel and gold combo was everywhere in the Reagan era, but in subsequent years, the look became a sort of shorthand for ...
When you think of your grandfather’s or even your father’s watch, what comes to mind? I am willing to bet that there are quite a few out there that are picturing a gold and steel Rolex Datejust with a ...
One of Omega‘s most iconic watches is finally getting the two-tone treatment. The Speedmaster Moonwatch chronograph has long inhabited an exalted place as the modern iteration of the watch NASA issued ...
This year, the Watches & Wonders Geneva trade show is once again an online event — only this time, it includes brands such as Rolex, Tudor, Patek Philippe and more. Check back here often for our ...
Up until recently, the renaissance of 1970s watches has been dominated by chunky geometric cases and integrated bracelets (the ones, in watch lingo, that are an extension of the case design rather ...
These timepieces shake off their clichéd 1980s associations. It might seem hard to bring the two-tone watch back into fashion when its most famous model is Patrick Bateman, the titular “American ...
A few weeks ago at the Golden Globes, two-tone watches quietly stole the red carpet: Hudson Williams of Heated Rivalry royalty wore a Bvlgari Serpenti in gold and diamonds, while Jeremy Allen White ...
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