• 5 Jun 2020, 5:22 p.m.

    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 76, cal 67, Niello

    Today a watch that combines a few features I saw before in other pocketwatches
    I showed here.

    It has a silver Niello case, it has a dedication to an employee inside, and
    the
    movement is a workhorse from Schaffhausen, not the cal 52, but the cal 67, a
    newer design, but as reliable as the cal 52.

    A movement also found in the Kriegsmarine pocketwatch also posted here in our
    series.

    I do like the color combination of the white dial ( love that dial ) and the
    silver/black case and the golden hands.

    It was made in 1941, but must have been sold later ( inscription says 1944 ).

    It is not the most expensive in my collection, not the most beautiful movement
    or case decoration, but it has something that it stands out.

    Happy to have it in my collection.

  • Master
    5 Jun 2020, 5:23 p.m.

    We have spoken about Niello cased pocket watches somewhere along the last 75
    plus days of the Virtual Museum. Personally, I find it very sad that this art
    form has all but completely died out - and it's really upsetting to me that
    there is literaly no one that I could find in a world wide search, who could
    help to restore some of these pieces of art.

    Niello is actualy a black mixture, usually sulphur, copper, silver and
    lead which is used as an inlay on engraved or etched metal, especially silver
    as is the case with most IWC Niello pocket watches. It is added as a powder or
    paste, then fired until it melts or at least softens, and flows or is pushed
    into the engraved lines in the metal. It hardens and blackens when cool, and
    the niello on the flat surface is polished off to show the filled lines in
    black, contrasting with the polished metal around it.
    I was told by the only
    two practising Niello craftsman here in The Netherlands, that the primary
    reason why it died out, is the toxic nature of the sulpher and lead fumes
    given off during the process of melting and working the molten niello, and the
    inherant risks of inhalation of those gases.

    By very nature of the process and material used - Niello ends up to be a
    rather hard and brittle cover layer, which is sadly prone to chipping and
    cracking. It is very seldom to find a niello cased pocket watch which shows
    zero signs of this chipping.

    The Watch

    Niello inlaid pocket watches were not cheap and the archives in Schafhausen
    reflect that indeed that prices for the same silver cased movement as found in
    a niello case were substaintially cheaper. So whay kind of man, would buy such
    a watch?

    Well, this man above was exactly such a man!

    Pictured here some 98 years ago circa 1922 is Senior **** Ramon Ortiz of San
    Jose, Costa Rica alongside his wife, Ramona Gutierrez with their three
    offsping Victoria,Jose and Antonio.

    Clearly, a man of discerning tastes as the watch was sold to him (or his
    company) some years before in 1910.

    The level of detail of this Niello work is amazing. Look at how even the
    silver crown bow is inlaid.

    Above, you read that the niello was applied, allowed to cool off and harden,
    and then polished off. So in fact, when new, that niello was polished to a
    high glass like gloss.

    I tried to catch the brilliance of this finish when taking a photo of the case
    back as you seen here below.

    Now, whilst this is a 0.900 german silver case, note how it was also adorned
    with a 18K gold cartouche for engraving. Note too, the diference in the
    paterning here, as opposed to Tonny's niello case.

    This watch being older and from a period when the Cal. 67 still did not exhist
    (the first Cal. 67 left the manufactury in 1933) is fitted with a C.52.

    Fully restored and serviced, she runs just as the logo on the movement
    suggests - like clockwork : Probus Scafusia !

  • Master
    5 Jun 2020, 6:38 p.m.

    Calibre 67 Kriegs Marine watches were shown before. There were several
    different models. The few KM watches found after the war were often de-
    nazified for obvious reasons. This was often done in an unprofessional way by
    dealers or collectors, scratching out the 'K M' logo on the dial, removing the
    military marks on the back cover by grinding or polishing. Watches were
    seriously damaged by that.

    However, after the war , the German Navy (Bundes Marine) recovered some of the
    cal. 67 war watches because the ships returned or because they were never used
    on a ship. The German authorities decided to use the watches for their post
    war vessels, which says something about their quality once more. This topic
    was discussed by Tonny in a previous post in this thread.

    The military dials were removed and exchanged for a white enamal one without
    any logo. The stamps on the back cover were removed completely and the watches
    got a new wooden case with a NATO stock number (
    Versorgunsnummer).Here
    is such rare watch. The number of recovered cal. 67 is unknown.

    Regards,

    Adrian,

    (alwaysiwc).

  • Master
    5 Jun 2020, 11:01 p.m.

    What a pocket watch trifecta! Thanks, gentlemen!

  • Master
    6 Jun 2020, 4:45 a.m.

    Magnifiscent watches today gentlemen

  • Master
    6 Jun 2020, 9:02 a.m.

    Thank you for the explanation of niello.

    In another post, other techniques of making watch cases more attractive were
    discussed by using a thin gold layer : gold filling, rolled gold and gold
    plating.

    Mark mentions the reason why these old techniques have disappeared : the
    procedure was often extremely toxic and by that forbidden by law, often in the
    19th century. However the end product was not at all toxic. A crumble of
    niello is harmless even if still metallic lead or sulpher is in it. Probably
    the most toxic method of processing was the technique of fire guilding. As far
    as I know it was not applied in pocket watch cases ( maybe in the 18th
    century) but abundantly on the much larger cases of table and mantle clocks.
    In fire guilding a mixture of gold powder and mercury was applied on the
    outside of the case. The gold powder is solved in mercury. By heating the
    item, the mercury will vaporise and the gold will deposit in a thin layer on
    the heated metal.

    Vaporized mercury is one of the most toxic anorganic material known. Lacking
    sufficient ventilation in the work shop, the vapor was inhaled by the
    craftsmen. First the teeth, then the hair fell out and finally organ failure
    appeared. The dome of a church in St Petersburg was guilded this way : 17
    workers died. After 1830 fire guilding was banned by law.

    Adrian,

    (alwaysiwc).

  • Master
    6 Jun 2020, 10:54 a.m.

    Adrian, very interesting background to the metal finishing. I will never look
    towards that ceiling again without thinking of how it looked originally (and
    how many workers died doing it).

  • Master
    6 Jun 2020, 10:59 a.m.

    To give those
    here unfamiliar with Niello cases an idea of why I'd love to be able to find a
    restorer for these cases - and how the niello chips out, here is a photo of
    such "damage".

    So you see the bare silver, where the niello inlay has chipped out.

    From what is otherwise a very beautiful caseback.