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Top Quality Longines White Watches (647) Items
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  • Longines - Horse racing

    On Sunday 29 November 2015, Kenichi Ikezoe on Shonan Pandora crossed first the finishing line in front of a large audience at the Japan Cup in association with Longines. For this performance, Shonan Pandora's owner, breeder, trainer, jockey and stable staff members were awarded with elegant Longines watches by Mr. Walter von Känel, President of Longines, and Andre Agassi, Longines Ambassador of Elegance.

    Inaugurated in 1981, the Japan Cup in association with Longines is a 2400 meter international Group 1 turf race for horses aged three-years-old and up. The race day is named after the most important race held this day. The brand is once again involved in this equestrian event of international importance, as its Official Partner, Timekeeper and Watch.
    The Japan Cup in association with Longines was the occasion to discover the Official Watch, which was the Longines Master Collection watch which features a refined silvered dial with a chronograph and moonphase display, as well as a stainless steel case with a transparent case back that reveals a self-winding mechanical movement.

    During the race day at Tokyo Racecourse, Longines celebrated feminine elegance and organized the Longines Prize for Elegance awarding the most stylish woman wearing an outfit in blue, which is the emblematic color of the watch brand. The winner of the prize, Kana Oya, received an elegant Longines watch from the hands of Andre Agassi, Longines Ambassador of Elegance.

  • Longines - 46th Artistic Gymnastics World Championships

    During the 46th Artistic Gymnastics World Championships, which took place in Glasgow from 23 October to 1st November 2015, Longines had the honour of awarding the Longines Prize for Elegance to Longines Ambassador of Elegance Giulia Steingruber (Switzerland) and Max Whitlock (Great Britain).

    Set up in 1997, this prize is aimed at honouring the most elegant and charismatic sportswomen and men. Apart from purely technical considerations, the criteria applied by the jury are based on harmonious movement, emotion and, above all, elegance during the performances. The jury was made up of Prof. Bruno Grandi, FIG President, Steve Frew, Commonwealth Games Gold medalist for Scotland, Amy benbow-Hebbert, PR Manager of Longines UK, and Walter von Känel, President of Longines. The winners of the Longines Prize for Elegance received an elegant Longines watch, a trophy, as well as cheque.

    The Official Watch in Glasgow was a model of the new Longines DolceVita collection, which represents contemporary elegance of the Longines watchmaking brand worldwide. The lady watch, cased in steel, is decorated with diamonds and featuring a silver-coloured "flinque" dial adorned with painted Roman numerals.

  • Longines - Spring Classic of Flanders

    The Longines Spring Classic of Flanders, which the Swiss watch brand is partnering and timekeeping, started 30 April in Lummen. During this four-day competition, Longines supported two major shows: The Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ on Friday 1 May and the Longines Grand Prix on Sunday 3 May. The team Italy won the first one, which is the first leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping Western European League 2015. The second one was won by Jerome Guery from Belgium.

    As part of its long-term partnership with the FEI, including being the FEI's Official Timekeeper and Watch, Longines is the Official Timekeeper of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping series. The Official Watch of the 2015 Longines Spring Classic of Flanders edition was a stainless steel Conquest Classic Moonphase watch. This model houses a self-winding mechanical chronograph movement. Its refined silvered dial displays the moon phases, echoing the elegance and excellence of equestrian sport stars.

  • Longines - Longines Future Ski Champions 2014

    The Longines Future Ski Champions, set up with the collaboration of the FIS, allowed promising ski stars selected by their respective national skiing federation to compete against the best skiers in the world in their age category under racing conditions similar to those of the official World Cup races.

    The first edition in 2013 gave the chance to fourteen young male skiers to take part to the competition. This year it was the turn of thirteen girls under the age of 16, from thirteen different countries, who had the opportunity to try the giant slalom piste. The competition was held alongside the women's race in the FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup at Val d'Isere.

    Carlotta Saracco (Italy) was crowned the Longines Future Ski Champion 2014, with a time of 55:93 seconds. Second was Nella Korpio from Finland, followed by Ida Dannewitz from Sweden. All three received a medal during a prize-giving ceremony that took place in the center of Val d'Isere, with the presence of Charles Villoz, Vice President of Longines, Marcel Looze, FIS Marketing Manager and Jean-Claude Fritsch, former director of Val d'Isere Sports Club. The winning champion Carlotta Saracco received as well a Longines watch. Meanwhile, her national Federation, the Federazione Italiana Sport Invernali received a cheque for $20,000 to be used for promoting Alpine skiing among young people in that country.

    This event was also an opportunity for Longines to present the Official Watch of the 2014/2015 skiing season, the Conquest 1/100th Alpine Skiing, a 100th of a second chronograph. This new model, fitted with a cutting-edge, exclusive movement, is a tribute by the brand to its long tradition of timing Alpine skiing competitions and enables its user to measure and display several intermediate times to one-hundredth of a second.

  • Longines - Longines FEI World Cup Jumping 2014/2015

    This weekend in Oslo took place the first round of the Longines FEI World Cup Jumping series, consisting of twelve unique qualifying opportunities for the coveted final in Las Vegas in April 2015. The Norwegian qualifying round saw the victory of Jur Vrieling on VDL Zirocco Blue NOP. The Official Watch of the event was a lady model in steel set with 30 diamonds from the Conquest Classic collection, a line dedicated to the equestrian world.

    Longines has a long association with equestrian sport, but the Longines FEI World Cup series holds a special place in the heart of the Swiss company which treasures the qualities of tradition, precision and elegance. Longines' passion for equestrian sports
    began indeed in 1878 with the production of a chronograph featuring an engraved jockey and his mount.

  • Longines - An enthusiasm for the world of horses since 1878

    The Longines and IFHA International Award of Merit 2014 was awarded to Alec Head at a ceremony in Paris on 6 October 2014. The Frenchman, a leading figure in his country's horseracing industry, has enjoyed enormous success as a jockey, trainer, owner and breeder over the course of a career spanning several decades.
    The trophy, accompanied by an elegant Longines watch, was presented to Mr Head by Mr Juan-Carlos Capelli, Vice-President and Head of International Marketing at Longines, and Mr Louis Romanet, President of the IFHA, during a ceremony specially held to mark the occasion.

    Longines is the Official Partner and the Official Watch of the IFHA, as well as the Title Partner in the Longines World's Best Racehorses Rankings. Once a year the Longines and IFHA International Award of Merit is awarded, paying tribute to the career of a figure from the horseracing world.

    In order to mark this outstanding collaboration that contributes so much to the prestige of horseracing, Longines has presented IFHA with a Longines Equestrian Lepine timepiece.
    This rose gold pocket watch, dating from 1927 and re-issue, has been produced in a highly exclusive limited edition to mark the Year of the Horse, and reflects the Swiss watch brand's passion for equestrian sports.This model pays tribute to this legendary animal that is the embodiment of not only prestige, but also elegance and performance, two values close to the heart of the brand known by its winged hourglass logo.

  • Longines - New Ambassadors

    Longines is proud to welcome Yana Kudryavtseva and Giulia Steingruber, both exceptional gymnasts, the former in rhythmic and the latter in artistic, to the prestigious family of Longines Ambassadors of Elegance.

    The Swiss watch brand Longines officially presented on 14 August 2014 at Saint-Imier (Switzerland) its two new, Yana Kudryavtseva and Giulia Steingruber, during a day's visit to the premises of the brand. They will represent a model in steel and rose gold from the Conquest Classic collection. Housing a mechanical calibre, this watch features a white mother-of-pearl dial and 12 diamond indices.

    Russian gymnast Yana Kudryavtseva, known for her clean technique and light execution was the youngest rhythmic gymnast to ever win the World Championships in 2013 at 15 years of age.

    While Giulia Steingruber, voted Swiss Athlete of the Year in 2013, has been excelling at the European Championships, notably in winning the gold medal in the vault two years in a row, in 2013 and this year in Sofia, Bulgaria, where she also won the bronze medal in the floor exercise.

    Embodying at the same time elegance and precision, grace and dynamism, Yana and Giulia perfectly represent the core values of Longines, as stated in its slogan: "Elegance is an Attitude".


  • Longines - New partner of Casas Novas

    Longines and Casas Novas signed an important long-term partnership agreement. The agreement enables Casas Novas to pursue its excellence targets as organizer of equestrian events and to gradually improve the quality of the competitions. Casas Novas and Longines share common values such as tradition, elegance and performance.

    The Swiss watch brand is proud to support the XXVIII edition of the CSI A Coruña, that will be held from 25 to 27 July 2014 at the Casas Novas Equestrian Centre. With a prize money of €256,000, this event consists of nine competitions whose highlight is the Longines Trophy.

    The Official Watch of the event will be a chronograph in steel from the collection, a line dedicated to Longines' passion for the equestrian world. It houses an exclusive mechanical column-wheel caliber and displays a black dial. Just as the entire collection, this timepiece is water-resistant to 5 bar and its screw-down case back is fitted with a sapphire glass.

  • Longines - Longines times the triple crown of thoroughbred racing

    The 140th Kentucky Derby was held this past weekend in Louisville, KY, and kicked off the first in the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing. Right there through it all - the entire Kentucky Derby weekend and for the upcoming races - is Longines. In fact, Longines is the Official Watch and Timekeeper of the   Kentucky Derby, the Entitlement Partner of the Longines Kentucky Oaks 140 that is the races and festivities that take place the day before the Derby, and the Official Watch and Timekeeper of the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes (the upcoming two legs of the Triple Crown).

    The brand's role in equestrian sports dates back to the late 1800s when it created its first chronograph movement, which later appeared on racetracks to time performances and races to the seconds. In the early 1900's Longines began its show jumping involvement and then moved on to flat racing and endurance competitions -- where precision is everything.

    The Kentucky Derby represents the epitome of thoroughbred racing and Longines provided its guests with access not only to the Turf Club for prime viewing of the two days of races, but also with attendance to the incredible Taste of Derby event (wherein chefs from across the USA are flown in to demonstrate their skills and offer a taste of their most special dishes), to the Winner's Party (thrown after the Derby with the owners, trainer and jockey of the winning horse present), and with an exclusive tour of the paddocks. In all, the event is a breathtaking experience not to be missed.

    In evidence of its support of the Kentucky Derby, Longines' overwhelming presence could be seen everywhere at Churchill Downs thanks to free-standing clocks, a digital Longines Kentucky Derby Countdown Clock on the Churchill Downs' track and more (the same will hold true at the two upcoming races). Additionally, the brand hosted a fashion show on the Kentucky Oaks Day, and presented the winner with a Conquest watch. On Derby Day, the brand presented Conquest watches to the owner, trainer and jockey of the wining horse, California Chrome.

    "This year we celebrate 60 years of Conquest," says Juan-Carolos Capelli, vice president, head of international marketing of Longines Watch Co. "It is also the year of the horse and so we are very excited to present some new Conquest watches, including a limited edition in gold that is a re-edition of the first one. It is a real pleasure to be a part of the Kentucky Derby and all of the equestrian sports we support."

    The Conquest Classic collection is a tribute to the early chronographs the brand produced for race enthusiasts and jockeys in New York. The new watches are fitted with self-winding movements offering a mix of tradition and watchmaking savoir-faire. 

  • Longines - The Longines Heritage 1968, steel

    Fully refurbished in 2012 to mark the brand's 180th anniversary, the Longines Museum houses many treasures including a magnificent square timepiece that was the inspiration for the Longines Heritage 1968.

    The grey brushed dial features black, finely painted Roman numerals and a chapter-ring around the outside. A fine line of black varnish on the minute and hour hands echoes the lines of the numerals, providing a delicate contrast.
     

    While the square case is at first glance more classical, the Longines Heritage 1968 reveals an interesting profile with its slightly bevelled glass that protrudes over the middle. Moreover, the trapezium-shaped date aperture contrasts with the more stringent lines of the case. The watch is fitted with a mechanical movement, L595 and the whole is mounted on an elegant black alligator strap.

  • Longines - A thrilling finale in Doha

    The Al Shaqab Equestrian Center, a world class equestrian facility, welcomed the best riders of the world to compete in exciting competitions. Scott Brash celebrated a double victory since he won the Longines Global Champions Tour Grand Prix of Doha on Hello Sanctos and has been crowned winner of the Longines Global Champions Tour 2013, with 203 points. With 194 points, Christian Ahlmann (Germany) arrived second and Laura Kraut (USA) third with 187 points. Scott Brash, Christian Ahlmann and Laura Kraut received watches from the hands of the President of Longines, Mr. Walter Von Känel
    The official watch of the event was a sparkling model from Longines DolceVita Collection, an elegant line with its characteristic rectangular cases.

  • Longines - Jim Bolger receives the International Award of Merit

    The Irish horse owner, trainer and breeder Jim Bolger was awarded the trophy and an elegant Longines watch from hands of Mr. Juan-Carlos Capelli, Vice President and Head of International Marketing of Longines, and Mr. Louis Romanet, IFHA Chairman. The Swiss watch brand is the Official Partner and the Official Watch of the IFHA, as well as the Title Partner of the Longines World's Best Racehorses Rankings.
    Mr. Jim Bolger has captured many big races across Europe in the last three decades. He has made a huge impact on the horseracing industry as a trainer, as a breeder, as an owner and as an educator of jockeys and trainers.

  • Longines - The Longines Legacy


    IW Magazine - August 13, 2012
    The Longines LegacyAmong the museums, manufactures and historic landmarks that dot the villages of the Swiss Jura Mountains, the heart of the country's watchmaking district, the Longines Museum at Saint-Imier is a standout. Located in a wing of the brand's manufacture, one of the first to be established in the region, the museum traces the history of Longines from 1832, and in so doing, comprises one of the most comprehensive histories of Swiss watchmaking.
    Longines celebrates that heritage this year, on its 180th anniversary, with the Saint Imier Collection of mechanical timepieces, a tribute to the town where it all started. Inspired by models produced during the brand's history, the collection includes a chronograph and a prestige model featuring four retrograde functions, containing the caliber L707 movement developed and made by ETA exclusively for Longines. It also has day/night and moonphase indications.
    The cases are either steel, rose gold or two-tone, with a choice of four case sizes. Dials are black, silvered or mother-of-pearl with diamond indices. All are fitted with mechanical movements.
    Cottage industry
    Like most Swiss watch companies, Longines began life as a comptoir d'etablissage, the French term for what we would call a cottage industry. The owner of an etablissage produced watches by dividing the work according to components and contracting the production into small, specialized units. He would then assemble the final components and sell the finished watches to outside distributors and agents or at fairs. The first watches were carried out of the valley by donkey, then by stagecoach.
    In the case of Longines, the founding assembleur/watchmaker was Auguste Agassiz, who assigned to local craftsmen the production of dials, hands and movement components.


    Making a watch in 1830 involved fifty-four distinct steps, rising to something like 100 at the end of the century. These were executed by nearly as many types of craftsmen, including jobs as esoteric as scratch-brush scraper and case-spring maker.
    Most of the craftsmen were farmers who worked on watches during the long winters.
    These home workshops were called "counters" - "comptoir d'etablissage" translates literally to "counter manufacturing," a method of watch production that remained a local practice until the 1970s.
    Agassiz's nephew, Ernest Francillon, succeeded him at Agassiz & Compagnie. When he took over in 1866, Francillon bought two adjacent parcels of land on the River Suze in Saint-Imier and built the region's first semi-mechanized watch workshop, or manufacture, making the decision to group all the steps in one place, with a staff that worked full-time, rather than only in the winter.
    He started with thirty or forty workers, and by the end of the century, employed 853 people. By 1912, 1,200 people worked for Longines. The population of Saint-Imier was 8,000.
    Sunlight
    The manufacture was built in the typical style of the Jura to allow maximum sunlight in the days before electricity. The buildings were rectangular, rather than square, with floor-to-ceiling windows placed close together to bring light to the workbenches. The narrow width of the building, with windows on each side, prevented the rooms from being dark in the middle.
    Francillon also changed the company name. Instead of following the convention of using a family name (Aggasiz was not his name, after all) he took the nickname of the land where the manufacture was built: Es Longines, which is latin and old French for "the flat middle."

    The plot of land he had chosen was the flattest place in the village wedged between Chasseral Mountain and Mont-Soleil. It was also chosen because of its proximity to the River Suze. There was no electricity at the time, so the river was tapped to run the machines.
    Francillon made two more decisions that would establish Longines as a world-class brand. He was the first watchmaker in the district to create a logo, a winged hourglass, and it is now the oldest brand logo on record registered with the World Intellectual Property Organization. Secondly, he instituted the policy of numbering every watch produced by the manufacture.
    Ledgers
    The brand's museum features a separate library containing the livres etablissage, a collection of 800 leather-bound ledgers that contain the number and details of every watch made by Longines since 1857. They list the caliber, model, a description and the name of the agent to whom each watch was sold.
    "We use these books every day because we get so many requests for information," says Jennifer Bochud, the museum curator, who is in regular contact with the auction houses that sell watches.


    "This adds a tremendous value to the watch," she says. "It also adds value for Longines, because we also find out more information about the watches—they travel all over the world, as if they have a life."
    The books record these details from number one to number 15-million, stretching from 1857 to 1969. Since then, the data has been computerized. By the brand's 175th anniversary in 2007, it had produced 34 million watches. (Bochud wears number 37-million.)
    Company milestones
    Francion died in 1900, and the company passed to a succession of leaders. In 1969, Walter Von Kanel became president, and still holds that position at the age of 71. The museum outlines the progression of technological advances represented by the manufacture's production over the years and some of the brand's milestones.
    Until about 1830, locally made timepieces were heavy pocket watches with a crown-wheel verge escapement. Soon the new Lepine design allowed watchmakers to make slimmer and cheaper watches that kept better time. By the late 1860s, they had turned to the Roskopf design as rugged and reliable as it was cheap.
    By the early 1870s, Longines was building chronometer movements, while its first time-measurement devices date from 1878.
    In 1920, the factory launched a movement with an eight-day power reserve, used in a series of pieces that included small clocks.
    In 1923, French scientist Jean Lecarme led an expedition on Mont Blanc, he took ten Longines chronometers with him.
    Longines was a member of the Aeronautical Association. In 1927, it recorded the famous flight of Charles Lindbergh from New York to Paris. Afterwards, he wrote a letter to Longines, outlining the functions he'd like to have on his watch, so Longines made one for him. The company still produces a version of this watch.
    A frequent entrant in World Expositions, Longines won ten Grand Prix medals at the 1929 Barcelona exhibition.
    In 1945, Longines introduced its first self-winding movement, caliber 22A. It was a circular movement measuring 21.5mm, with subsidiary seconds.
    In 1954 the company made its first transportable quartz clock. It was used for sports timekeeping, and was accompanied by a photo finish mechanism. Longines has long been active in equestrian sports, archery and skiing.
    In the 1950s, Longines began to name collections. In 1954 it launched the Conquest collection, and in 1957, the Flagship.
    The brand started producing quartz watches in 1969. At that time, the brand was making twenty percent quartz and eighty percent mechanical movements. Eight years later, the proportion was just the opposite.
    The quartz layoffs

    Since quartz movements require less work, Longines, like all Swiss brands, had to lay off many workers during this period. Between 1975 and 1985, watch industry employment in the Saint-Imier area went from 3,000 jobs to 900 jobs.
    Today, the equation of Longines production has reversed again, with seventy percent devoted to mechanical movements. During the 1970s, LCD was introduced into the collection as the result of a collaboration between Texas Instruments and ETA, which was by then making Longines' movements.
    Longines was in the forefront of many of the most important trends in watchmaking during this period. In 1978, it was producing watches with a very slim quartz caliber, and in the 1980s, introduced two-tone watches into its collections. In 1987 Longines produced its first reproduction of the Lindbergh watch.
    In 1983 the Swatch Group acquired Longines. The Group's ETA division had been making the brand's movements for several years because the last manufacture movement (L990) made by Longines was in 1977. After that, the brand used movements made by ETA, which today occupies a section of the Longines manufacture that is dedicated to making movements exclusive to the brand. Thus, the Saint-Imier headquarters has returned to the role of the manufacture.

    Elegance begins

    By the end of the 1990s, Longines introduced the advertising slogan "Elegance is an Attitude," and entered partnerships with the brand's first ambassadors. In 2001, the company produced its 30-millionth watch. By 2007, the brand introduced the MasterCollection, made up entirely of mechanical watches, including the MasterCollection Retrograde, with an exclusive movement fitted with retrograde functions. The Longines Sport Collection was also introduced in 2007.
    Today Longines focuses on a mix of sporty models and dress pieces. The 2012 releases focus on the brand's four pillars: Elegance, Watchmaking Tradition, Sport and Heritage.


    Elegance: The elegant aspect of its lines is exemplified in the Longines PrimaLuna, the Longines DolceVita and the La Grande Classique de Longines collections.
    Watchmaking Tradition: The Longines Master Collection is an example of the brand's technical and aesthetic expertise, while the brand's Evidenza was inspired by the Art Deco movement. And a prime focus this year is the Saint-Imier Collection, this series of exceptional pieces is intended as a tribute to the town central to Longines' founding and development.
    Sport: Longines' involvement in sport dates back to 1878 with its first chronograph movement, the 20H. The Longines Sport Collection is a tribute to its history in the world of sport while Conquest and HydroConquest lines represent further explorations into aquatic sports.
    Heritage: Among the exceptional pieces: the Lindbergh Hour Angle Watch, a re-issue of the timepiece developed for the American pilot Charles Lindbergh in 1931. The Longines Weems Second-Setting Watch, a tribute to the navigation system devised by Captain Philip van Horn Weems, and the Longines Twenty-Four Hours, a re-issue of a watch designed in the 1950s specially for Swissair pilots, are also among the stars among the Heritage models.

  • Longines - Michael Chen Zhao at Roland Garros


    WEEHAWKEN, NJ - May 25, 2011 - Michael Chen Zhao, the United States' representative for the 2011 Longines Future Tennis Aces Tournament at Roland Garros, June 2-4, has been preparing both on and off the court in advance of his first international and clay court competition. The 12-year-old Princeton Junction, NJ native qualified for the Tournament following a victory at last month's U.S. Future Tennis Aces Tournament at Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, site of the U.S. Open, in Flushing Meadows, NY.

    Zhao, currently ranked No. 11 in the USTA national 12-and-under division, will compete against athletes from 15 countries for a chance  to play in a doubles exhibition match with tennis legends Andre Agassi and Jim Courier on the historic red-clay courts at the French Open, and receive financing for tennis equipment until their 16th birthday, courtesy of Longines.

    "I'm really excited and a little nervous about this really cool experience," said Zhao. "There will be a little pressure as well since this will be my first time at an international tournament. I'm preparing by training really hard and maybe getting a chance to hit on red clay before I go."

    Zhao began playing tennis at 5-years-old and entered his first tournament by age 8. His best finish is a third-place result at a National Open event at the National Tennis Center and he has reached the quarterfinals of the USTA Winter National 12s Championship played the first week of January in Tucson, Arizona. He dominates his opponents using his powerful backhand and claims to model his ground strokes after his idol Novak Djokovic. "I like the form of his strokes and how much energy he has when he plays," he said. 

    Longines Future Tennis Aces is part of the brand's global commitment to support and develop tennis' superstars of tomorrow. All the players who qualified for the Paris event will have the opportunity to attend the French Open Women's Final on June 4. Longines is the official timekeeper and partner of the French Open.

    A complete schedule of events follows:
    Longines Future Tennis Aces World Championship
    Date: Thursday and Friday, June 2-3
    Time: 11:00 am - 6.00 pm local time Paris
    Location: Roland Garros courts 16

    Longines Future Tennis Aces World FINAL
    Date: Saturday, June 4
    Time: 10:15 am local time Paris
    Location: Roland Garros courts 7

    Andre Agassi and Jim Courier Exhibition Match featuring finalists from Longines Future Tennis Aces Tournament
    Date: Saturday, June 4
    Time: 11:15 am local Paris time
    Location: Roland Garros courts 7

    Press Conference with Andre Agassi, Jim Courier and Longines President Walter Von Känel
    Date: Saturday, June 4
    Time:1:00-1:45 p.m. local Paris time
    Location: Tenniseum at Roland Garros

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