Dos Pesos Gold Coin Ring in 14kt Yellow Gold.1914 $5 Indian Gold Coin In 14kt Solid (not Plated Or Filled) Yellow Gold Bezel.Country/Region of Manufacture: Switzerland.This item can be shipped to North, South, or Latin America, all countries in Europe, all countries in continental Asia, Australia. The seller is “jptime” and is located in New York, New York. This item is in the category “Jewelry & Watches\Watches, Parts & Accessories\Watches\Wristwatches”. The item “Corum $20 Gold Coin 35mm Bracelet Watch (22805)” is in sale since Wednesday, June 17, 2020. Fossner has been in the watch business, both in Europe and USA, since the early 1970’s. J&P Timepieces is owned by Jeff Morris and Peter Fossner, hence J & P. We do not guarantee waterproofing on any of our timepieces. 18k yellow gold integrated bracelet and clasp. 403725 measures 35mm and features a bezel engraved for hour markers, diamond-set crown, and snap-on gold coin case-back with Lady of Liberty dated 1897. However, it could be argued that American gold got its revenge on the Swiss watch industry, when Nixon took the dollar off the gold standard.AugAugBy admin In corum 35mm bracelet coin corum gold watch Corum $20 Gold Coin 35mm Bracelet Watch (22805)Ĭase: Signed, 22k gold coin and 18k yellow gold case no. Eventually, Corum was able to negotiate an exemption because the slicing of the coins took place in Switzerland rather than on American soil. Targeting the US market, Bannwart started slicing up $20 Liberty Eagle coins, but according to Rayner Hesse’s encyclopaedia of jewellery, Jewelrymaking through History, these watches risked being banned in the US because of a law prohibiting mutilation of its coins. His inspired notion was to use the then new sapphire crystal watchglasses to cover the surface of the coin, maintaining the desirable slim profile, turning what other manufacturers used as a protective cover into the dial of the watch. After all, having to open a coin to tell the time occupied valuable seconds and-apologies for the inevitable pun-time is money.Ĭorum was founded in the 1950s by a creative genius called René Bannwart who had headed up the then newly-inaugurated creation department at Omega during the 1940s. The Corum Coin watch put an end to all that. I own a Vacheron Constantin from the early 1970s and I love it, but checking the time is no subtle matter, I have to extend my arm until there is no danger of the watch getting caught in the shirtcuff, find the tell-tale bump, press it, watch the top spring open and then peer inside at the small watch-nothing discreet about that. This mini-watch was also hinged so that, with the application of a nail under a little olivette, the tiny timepiece could be pulled up to be wound and set.Īt first it was carried in the pocket, where, presumably, it could easily be mistaken for just another large gold coin. The case band, milled to resemble the edge of a coin, featured a slight bump which, when pressed, would cause the “lid” to spring open to reveal the time on a small movement inside. The top of a coin was sliced off and hinged. The idea of making a coin into a watch sounds pretty bling, but the way these marques carried it out, the concept was rather subtle. presidents during the zenith of American power in the second half of the 20th century: as well as Reagan, it was worn by LBJ, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, George Bush Senior and Bill Clinton, while its place in popular culture was assured when Andy Warhol acquired one for his collection. The coin watch is probably my favourite Corum, not least because it seems to have been a vital part of the equipment of U.S. Whatever the Valentine Brothers and later Simply Red had to say about Reaganomics in the hit “Money’s Too Tight (to Mention)”, it was clearly working for Ronnie. The watch was coin-thin for the simple reason that it was a coin: a gold 20-dollar coin watch by Corum. The Gipper looked purposeful with his arms folded across his chest, displaying a coin-thin gold watch on a gold bracelet. In the first year of his presidency, Ronald Reagan and his raven-black hair appeared on the cover of Time magazine with the bold headline “Reaganomics: Making It Work”. I say “these days” because, back in the early 1980s, Corum made a promising start as the preferred timekeeping partner of Reaganomics. However, these days there is a distinct shortage of horological brand affinity partnerships with economic movements. Moser) cars (take your pick) and even cigars (Hublot and Opus X and Zenith and Cohiba). Sporting events have long been linked to timepieces (Rolex with Wimbledon and Formula One, for example) as have popular music ensembles (the Rolling Stones and Zenith, Tears for Fears and Hublot) performing artists ( Bryan Ferry and H. Having a high-profile horological partner is part of what it is to exist in today’s brand-aware world.
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