Chanel - The "Premiere Flying Tourbillon" Watch
On the 25th anniversary of CHANEL's first watch the Premiere, whose shape was inspired by the octagonal geometry of the No. 5 perfume bottle stopper and the Place Vendôme, Chanel offers women the opportunity to enter into the world of high mechanical complications. Appropriately, this feminine incursion into the universe of watchmaking complexity is just as mysterious as it is beautiful and poetic.
After its first Tourbillon on a J12 model in 2005, this year, for the first time, Chanel presents a flying Tourbillon.
This exceptional Tourbillon, developed in close collaboration between Chanel and the Swiss manufacturers, engineers and master-watchmakers Renaud & Papi (APRP SA) - the advanced research and development branch of Audemars Piguet - is a first for both companies.
Decorated with the motif of the camellia, a tribute to Mademoiselle Chanel's favorite flower, this flying Tourbillon beats away discreetly and almost secretly at the heart of the Premiere watch. The floral design creates a delicate texture with the use of interlocked petals and a heart that is paved with diamonds. The flying Tourbillon makes one rotation per minute, with the petals indicating the seconds.
Equipped with a power reserve of 40 hours, this movement ("Camelia Flying Tourbillon" Caliber) has been mounted on a custom-designed rectangular bottom plate. All the finishes and parts that are chamfered, drawn and circular grained by hand, adhere to the highest Swiss watchmaking traditions.
The hour and minute hands are off-center and set higher on the black ceramic dial.
The watch case maintains the perfectly balanced original proportions, albeit in new dimensions:
28.5 mm by 37 mm, compared to 19 mm by 26 mm of the traditional Premiere.
The case, the bezel and the crown are set entirely with baguette-cut or roundcut diamonds or precious stones.
Produced in a limited edition of 20 numbered pieces, the "Premiere Flying Tourbillon" in 18-carat white gold is set with 101 baguette-cut diamonds for a total of 5.2 carats, and 127 brilliant-cut diamonds for a total of 2 carats. Each piece requires 23 hours of setting and over one hundred hours of assembly.