As some of you know, I am collecting pocketwatches, IWC only.
Far from saying that my collection is a museum collection but I am proud to
have found some nice and rare pieces over time.
Some of the pocketwatches are common, easy to find on the market, sometimes in
better condition than mine, but some I have are gems.
So in these crazy times, as the museum in Schaffhausen is closed, why not open
one here on the forum.
As long as the museum is closed, I will post here daily a pocketwatch from my
collection.
I hope I don't run out of pieces before the virus is beaten. Fingers crossed
for all of us.
I will post them in a random order, with some comments, feel free to join.
Keep safe all.
DAY 15 :
As promised yesterday, today another Pallweber, but this time a very rare
Pallweber I with a gold hunter case.
As you can see on the pictures, it is unbelievable that a watch from 1884
still can be in such pristine condition.
I was fortunate to be able to buy this watch from a person in Holland who was
a direct descendant from the first owner. The watch stayed in the same family
for over 135 years. It was kept as a family heirloom in a drawer and was
passed on to the younger generations. Since the last owner didn't had kids, he
wanted the watch to be in the hands of a collector. So I was very honored to
buy this Pallweber.
There are a few special features ( next to be a rare golden Pallweber in a
hunter case ) The dial is in Dutch, even the colors on the dial match the
Dutch national flag.
To set the time, you see a pull lever set, most Pallwebers I saw have the push
lever set.
The cal number ( cal 40 ) is under the dial so next time I go to Schaffhausen
we will
have a look. The case number is 842.
The fact that there are some very old IWC watches you can find in Holland is
due to a dealer that was very active for IWC ; Elias from Amsterdam. If you
find a pre 1900 watch in Holland, big chance it was sold by that dealer.