The (Less intimidating) Watch Thread
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I saw one of the Cabourn watches at the newly-reopened Pickings and Parry in Melbourne. It's a really nice piece.  
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@tmg unless you have forearms like Arnold Schwarzenegger at his peak, you'll find a small watch looks weird for a few days, and then you'll adjust. I think that there are a lot of weenies on sites like Hodinkee who're convinced that they can only get away with something in a small range. They're wrong. I'm pretty big, but normally wear a Tender watch that's the same size as the Timex. I'm good with it. I'm also toying with an IWC Big Pilot's Watch, which has a corpulent 46 mm diameter.  
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Hodinkee have a review of the Certina DS PH200M diver watch.  It's priced around $700, though not available in the US, which puts it in the same ballpark as a micro-brand diving watch. However, Certina is a part of the Swatch group, and (as such) benefits from their Powermatic 80 ETA movement. Looks a decent piece. Might be worth investigating if you're into divers. 
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ChrWard Trident Vintage Pro on top my ihsh-100  Sent from my SM-G935P using Tapatalk 
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I'm liking the full metal G-Shock that Casio announced at Basel.  There's a hands on at aBlogToWatch, and it's got some interesting tech built in. The watch can be connected to a smartphone to set the time or reminders. 
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@neph93 you mean something like-this?   
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I have mixed feelings about that metal square G-Shock. On one hand, it's pretty cool and I kind of want one. On the other hand, I feel like a $500 metal G-Shock is kind of an oxymoron. G's are supposed to be lightweight and relatively inexpensive (on top of being super durable). It's like expensive Chinese food. Or jumbo shrimp. 
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You ever watch Ugly Delicious? David Chang makes some interesting points about the historical denigration of Chinese food and why we think it has to be cheap. It's a good show… 











