A glimpse of 11 novelties at the Salon, starting with Tudor, which launched a technical model with a new look: the Black Bay Pro with dual time zone and fixed bezel, introducing new aesthetic details. Grand Seiko presented its first complication, the Kodo Constant-force Tourbillon, which combines a tourbillon with a constant-force mechanism as a single-axis unit, and Vacheron Constantin relaunched the legendary 222, created in 1977 by Jorg Hysek. Faithful to the original, it features only a few modifications such as the introduction of a new movement.
Zenith broadens the offer of the Chronomaster Sport with gold and two-tone versions, retaining the charm and performance of the original model, and Hublot presents a world first in synthetic sapphire colouring: the translucent purple of the Big Bang Tourbillon Automatic Purple Sapphire. Cartier returns to the Pasha, reintroducing one of its original details: the presence of a protective grid above the sapphire crystal in the Pasha de Cartier Grille. Jaeger-LeCoultre, on the other hand, introduces for the first time a perpetual calendar in the Polaris line with a beautiful blue dial in both the steel and rose gold versions.
Giving a sportier look to the Klepcys Dice, the single-pusher chronograph from Cyrus Genève capable of measuring two short times independently, is the Lime version with a new yellow/green look. Ulysse Nardin takes the Freak S into orbit in the cosmos with a layout reminiscent of a spaceship and integrates the first double oscillator with a self-winding differential using the 'Grinder' system. Chanel, on the other hand, creates its first in-house flying tourbillon in the J12 Diamond Tourbillon Caliber 5. Eagerly awaited by collectors is the new edition of the TAG Heuer Monaco Gulf, equipped for the first time with the Heuer manufacture movement 02.