introducing-the-new-piaget-polo-perpetual-calendar-ultra-thin

Introducing The New Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin

Piaget‘s watches across all the collections often embody bold and creative designs, admired by the public. Still, the brand’s watchmaking history is rooted in creating original and high-precision movements. Since 1874, the manufacture has been producing movements for its watches, and it has been a supplier of the most complex “engines” for many eminent watch brands in Switzerland. For connoisseurs and amateurs alike, Piaget is often synonymous with ultra-thin mechanical movements. The Piaget Polo collection started its life as a sporty alternative, but recently moved into ultra-thin watchmaking, with the Polo Skeleton. It is now joined by a new high-end model, the Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin. 

When half a century ago, in 1979, Piaget introduced the Polo watch; it was equipped with a 7P quartz calibre. Polo was a lovely must-have chic piece in the 1980s, and since then has become the symbol of good mood, refined style, a subtle sense of beauty, and a luxurious lifestyle. The Polo collection evolved over the years and was recently updated, but complication-wise offered the time-and-date and the chronograph only and a newly added ultra-thin skeleton. Today, we welcome a perpetual calendar to the Polo family of ultra-thin watches, with a moon phase display.

Perpetual calendars can be found in other Piaget collections, but it is the first time a mechanical QP enters the Polo line. Recently, a QP in Polo FortyFive and Gouverneur collections employed the automatic calibre 855P, and Polo Emperador housed the 856P. For the new watch, Piaget developed a new calibre. The new 1255P ultra-thin movement is based on the self-winding ultra-thin 1200P calibre from 2010, inspired by the released in 1960 world-thinnest at the time 12P movement. The 1200P was and still is one of the thinnest movements with automatic winding, measuring only 2.35mm, and powers watches in the Altiplano collection.

Suppose you turn over the Altiplano and the new Polo Perpetual. In that case, the sapphire caseback will let you observe two identical images; only the micro-rotor of the QP is decorated differently. It is blue, with circular Côtes de Genève, and there are fewer markings around the Piaget coat of arms. You guessed it right, the difference between the 1255P and the 1200P is the perpetual calendar module with a moon-phase mechanism under the dial, and it adds just a little over 1.5mm to the movement height, to a total of 4mm. 1255P will provide the watch with about 42 hours of power reserve and beats to a frequency of 21,600 vibrations/hour, and it is mechanically programmed to show the correct day-date-month and the leap year until the year 2100.

The Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar appears in a typical cushion-shaped stainless steel case with a flat round bezel, 42mm in diameter and 8.65mm thin, with water resistance up to 30m. For comparison, the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Selfwinding Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin is 41mm x 6.30mm, and the Bvlgari Octo Finissimo Perpetual Calendar is 5.80mm tall. The three models are unique and sophisticated in their aesthetics and presentation of the classic complication, and outright beautiful, skilfully executed, a feast for anyone’s eyes. But I digress.

The dial of the new Piaget model is emerald green (the colour green is familiar to the collection), horizontally striped – a.k.a gadroon pattern – with perpetual calendar sub-counters at 3 o’clock for the date, at 9 o’clock for the weekday, and for the current month at 12 o’clock, with a tiny leap year indicator integrated in the month subdial. The moon phase window is positioned at 6 o’clock. To balance the layout, Piaget’s designers opted for the flat ring with a “perpetual calendar” designation, with the “Piaget” text logo and the moon phase inside the circle. The hour and minute hands and the hour indices are Super LumiNova coated and shaped so that reading time in the dark is straightforward – to learn what day it is, you would have to wait till the sun gets up.

The Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin features the new interchangeable SingleTouch system to easily replace the integrated H-link steel bracelet, as the model also comes with a rubber strap – a practical system that features a pusher on the back, between the lugs. Both bracelet and the strap show variations of the gadroons pattern on the dial – as you can see, the bracelet has been slightly redesigned compared to the Piaget Polo Skeleton (mostly the mid-links)

This beautiful watch, which will be part of the permanent collection and isn’t limited, will set you back EUR 60,500, which is a lot. Still, coming from a brand with extraordinary watchmaking prowess that has been setting trends and supporting extravagant and harmonious lifestyles, it is at least to be admired.

For more information, please visit www.piaget.com.

Technical specifications – Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin

Case: 42mm diameter x 8.65mm height – stainless steel case, brushed and polished – sapphire crystals front and caseback – correctors in the caseband for perpetual calendard – 30m water-resistant

Dial: Dark emerald green with gadroons pattern, applied facetted markers on the inner flange Super LumiNova coated – date, month and date indications, leap year, moon phase display – hours and minutes hands Super-LumiNova coated

Movement: Calibre Piaget 1255, in-house, 1200P based – automatic with micro-rotor – ultra-thin 4mm – 25 jewels – 21,600 vibrations/hour – 42-hour power reserve – hours and minutes, perpetual calendar with moonphase

Bracelet: Delivered with an H-shaped stainless steel bracelet, brushed and polished, folding clasp and green rubber strap with easy interchangeability system

https://monochrome-watches.com/introducing-piaget-polo-perpetual-calendar-ultra-thin-stainless-steel-specs-price/

Related Posts