Watches and Wonders Edit: Cartier updates its legendary Santos and Tortue, roars with an animal-themed addition, and essays an optical illusion with the Reflection de Cartier
- The Tortue Monopoussoir Chronograph is thinner and lighter than its predecessors and features Cartier’s slimmest-ever chronograph movement, the Manufacture 1928 MC
- The Reflection de Cartier is a cuff-shaped watch that forms a Cartier ‘C’, with a bracelet is that has openworked and polished reflective gold sections
From refreshing a century-old classic and a whimsical journey into abstract animal patterns, to an optical puzzler lavishly covered in diamonds and two contrasting updates on the ultimate pilot’s watch, Cartier had something for everyone at this year’s Watches and Wonders.
The monopoussoir chronograph complication was first seen on a Tortue in 1928, and was refreshed in 1998 with the blued steel, apple-shaped hands and hollow seconds hand that also distinguish the most recent iteration. Other notable features of the new watch include the chronograph subdials at 3 o’clock and 9 o’clock, which are operated by a push button integrated into the crown, and a rail track outside the hour markers for extra legibility.
The Tortue Monopusher Chronograph is also thinner and lighter than its predecessors and houses Cartier’s slimmest ever chronograph movement, Manufacture 1928 MC, which is just 4.3mm thick. The hours and minutes version comes in a numbered limited edition of 200, while there’s also a platinum set version, of which just 50 are available.