Named after the ancient tremblage technique, the two new Moritz Grossmann models shown here are available with a 41 mm case in 18-carat rose gold or steel. The tremblage technique is used for the German silver dial and is practised manually with a burin, which is guided in different directions on the surface until a very special texture is achieved. The creation of each dial takes several days of work. Also on the dial, the hour markers, the minute track scale and the frame of the small seconds dial are 'carved' out of the material itself, only to be polished later. The leaf hands, on the other hand, are flame-blued. The manufacture movement used is the 100.1 calibre (198 components, 20 jewels - 3 of which are in gold settings, 18,000 vibrations per hour, 42-hour power reserve), a hand-wound mechanical movement with a 2/3 German silver plate and a high-efficiency balance wheel. The movement is also engraved and finished by hand and is visible through the sapphire glass porthole on the case back. A hand-sewn crocodile strap with a pin buckle completes the watch.
Prices51,600 euros (with pink gold case); 37,800 euros (with steel case).