guardians

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Officially launched at the SIHH 2012, Le Garde Temps, Naissance d’une Montre is a project designed to safeguard traditional watchmaking skills and techniques and to ensure that they are passed down to future generations. One year on, the theory is giving way to the practicalities of making a watch entirely by hand. Tracey Llewellyn

The Guardians of

Time S

ome years ago, three of the greatest names in contemporary watchmaking – Stephen Forsey, Robert Greubel (who between them make up Greubel Forsey) and Philippe Dufour – came together, united by a common aim. As Forsey explains: “We all realised

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that the practice and knowledge of many traditional watchmaking techniques, and hand craftsmanship in general, was sinking into oblivion and being replaced by industrial production.” The three share a belief in the spirit of openness – something that has not always been exhibited in their profession – and a desire to share the skills and knowledge they have accumulated. And it is for this reason that Le Garde Temps, Naissance d’une Montre (The Guardian of Time, Birth of a Watch) was born – a project aimed

at preserving, perpetuating and sharing traditional watchmaking expertise for future generations. “We are taking direct action,” continues Forsey, “by initiating a project involving the creation of a wristwatch – from the first sketches to the final timepiece using only traditional and ancestral techniques.” Grateful for the fact that they were given access to a wealth of experience from masters of the past, both Forsey and Greubel decided that it was their “responsibility” to share the combined knowledge that they have accumulated.


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