THE INDEPENDENT WATCHMAKER

Oris

THE INDEPENDENT WATCHMAKER

Oris

THE INDEPENDENT WATCHMAKER

Oris

The History

When Messrs Paul Cattin and Georges Christian purchased a floundering watch factory in the foothills of Switzerland’s Jura Mountains in 1904, their vision was clear: high-quality mechanical watches made with efficient, state-of-the-art industrial methods. Renaming it after the local Oris Valley, they turned the firm’s fortunes around on a sixpence. As is still the case today, the founding tenet proved irresistible to discerning but non-elitist customers. A golden post-war period was followed by a particularly rocky Quartz Crisis in the 1970s, but a management buyout in 1982 ensured Oris could rebuild itself on what was then a risky strategy of producing nothing but mechanical watches, albeit kitted out with useful functions and accessibly priced.

Collections

With a history that stretches back more than a century, Oris boasts a rich library of vintage designs from which to draw. Its mechanical watches range in style from retro-inspired aviation timepieces to modern, high-performance diving watches, all of them providing exceptional quality at a great price.

Our Picks

Browse the styles our editors are coveting for their own wrists, or shop all Oris watches here.

Stories

With its left-field partnership deals, special-edition watches commemorating underdog heroes and slogans such as “real watches for real people” and #goyourownway, the resolutely independent Oris has a reputation for zigging when the rest of the industry zags.

A Man Of Honour

Born in Kentucky, US, in 1931, Mr Carl Brashear is a little-known hero of black history, being the US Navy’s first African-American Master Diver, plus its first ever amputee diver, having lost part of his left leg on a mission to salvage a hydrogen bomb in 1966. Oris has paid tribute to his remarkable endeavours with a brace of limited editions in marine-grade bronze, each with a gorgeous sea-blue dial.

Innovations

The Depth Gauge

IWC Schaffhausen may have launched the world’s first depth-gauge watch in 1999, but in 2012 Oris reinvented it with forehead-slapping simplicity. Somewhat counter-intuitively for a diver’s watch, it works by allowing water into an air channel carved around the sapphire crystal.

The Carbon-Fibre Case

The partnership between Oris and the Williams F1 team began in 2003. More than a decade later, their relationship was viscerally realised with the watchmaker’s first carbon-fibre timepiece. Oris employed processes shared by Williams’ carbon experts to yield a fully carbon case middle that weighs just over 7g.

The In-House Movement

Oris’ 110th anniversary in 2014 marked the return of in-house movement making. The so-called Calibre 110 was a hand-wound beauty, whose single barrel powers proceedings for up to 10 days, its “state of wind” indicated by a circular power reserve subdial.


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