Dive watches are not just for men: three models that add style to subaquatic activities
- Blancpain, Longines and Bell & Ross have brought their A games to – and below – the surface
And I lost it. On its maiden voyage. Like a watery Icarus, my drone flew too far out to sea. Not only that, I have no proof that I mastered the oceans. Well, no aerial proof any way. Bah!
Back to the watches. I had planned to celebrate my aquatic feats by looking at dive watches this week, and despite my tragic loss and unlike my drone, I won’t be deviating from that course. We’ll start proceedings with a watch that is making a strong case for inclusion in my top 10 timepieces of the year, the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms Barakuda (above).
Among Swiss watchmakers, Blancpain has one of the richest heritages when it comes to dive watches, with the original Fifty Fathoms introduced in 1953. The Barakuda is based on a Fifty Fathoms spin-off created for the German market in the 1960s and will appeal to nostalgia nerds with a design that remains faithful to the original. The black dial has markers coated in Super-LumiNova, but in the retro beige patina rather than the more modern white, with a splash of red.
The watch is sized at 40mm but wears smaller on the wrist, which is a good thing. Inside is a calibre 1151 movement with an impressive 100 hours of power reserve. The only additional feature is the date indicator. The dive elements of the watch include a unidirectional bezel – with the domed glass insert that I adore – 300 metres of water resistance and a rubber strap. Needless to say, if you ever want to take this deeper than a swimming pool, you are good to go. Limited to 500 pieces, the Fifty Fathoms Barakuda is priced at HK$109,000.