The colour code is one of the aesthetic and functional features of the Klepcys Dice by Cyrus Genève, the first wristwatch to be equipped with two chronographs capable of operating totally independently of each other, or even in synchrony.
Not to be confused with the split-seconds chronograph, which is instead a single chronograph module in which the double hand can measure two events at the same time or take an intermediate time. Rather, it is a totally unprecedented solution.
To simplify and make it easy to read the indications of the two chronographs on the dial, the company played on the colour scheme. In some cases even bold, as was the case with the Lime yellow/green variant. The new Saffron version dares even more, with saffron orange and bright green, shades that make it even easier to read the recorded time intervals.
The 30-minute chrono counter at 3 o'clock features two hands, one saffron orange and one bright green, marking time on a graduated scale with superimposed 15- and 30-minute displays, alternating in the double colour. The colour code is also echoed in the two central seconds hands, the two column wheels, visible at 12 and 6 o'clock respectively, the double-scale flange, the column wheels and the respective crowns.
The 3D architecture of the openworked dial allows one to admire the movement, which is also visible through the sapphire crystal on the case back: the CYR1718 manufacture automatic calibre, equipped with a single barrel for a 55-hour power reserve when fully wound. It is housed in a 42 mm coussin case in grade 5 titanium. It is available with an orange Cordura fabric strap or an integrated bracelet in satin-finished titanium, in a limited edition of 50 for each of the two versions.
Prices: 40,850 euro with strap; 42,500 euro with bracelet.