Wednesday, November 6, 2013

These are the places that we could possible get a Rolex Daytona Stainless Steel watch!

“T317tairport update bought Ref 116520 Daytona Stainless Steel White face. Ayala Cebu. Asking price 556,000 peso 520,000 cash anyway settled 500,000 ask for the boss. Got It. With your help i was able to determine what was a fer price to pay. and i am very happy. Thank you once more for the great info on this site.”

A message he left in my blog, well, I had a chance visiting Fort Rolex AD, I spotted one Ref 116520 Daytona Black dial.

And this gentleman just asked me comment on where he can get one, not long later he went to Ayala Cebu to buy his Ref 116520!
Congratulation!

People waits for months and years for a Daytona, and he got it almost immediately.

Peso 500,000 is about HKD$94,300, that is about 7% more expensive than HK, in HK, A whit dial is HKD$87,500 provided there is the watch!

Three weeks ago HKIA friend told me have a Ref 116520 Daytona Black offered to us at HKD$93,000  that is a super good deal, of course the watch sold immediately after the annpouncement!

And If you had time and if you have money of course, go try these places
Makati Rolex AD,
Cebu Rolex AD.
HKIA Rolex AD.


HKIA Rolex AD

 Rolex Datejust lady 31 Ref 178245 List price HKD$210,500
Rolex Submariner Ref 116610LV HKD$63,100 net
Samsung Note II LTE 5 Nov taken at HKIA

There may be having surprise!
HK Snob
HK Kong Tsan
Sham Shui Po  Poor Snob
Cebu Snob

Monday, November 4, 2013

Classic Rolex Flagship Model Day Date and Submariner with Colourmix horse hair watch strap

 
Panther like Horse hair Strap Day Date,  brown Horse hair Date Just,  Pink Horse Hair Day Date for Woman, Black plain Strap Submariner.




Ref 18038 White Enamel Like Dial Day Date 18KY yellow gold, Never been polished, for Sale HKD$45,500 net.







 


Horse Hair unhide!



Men's Date Just 18 KT solid Gold with greyish green dial (not champange gold) with White markings, carry brown feather like soft horse hair strap on Sale with just HKD$21,000 net. A men's Classic Watch for life!



Open. Classic Rolex Flagship model with Colourmix Horse hair Strap
Horse hair is very very tender, soft and having satin like texture and it is two-dimensional as the hair stand up like a sea urchin… Nice soft, unique Rolex that no other would have the same on the write.

HK Snob
Tsim Sha Tsui Kong Tsan Snob
Sham Shui Po Snob


Rolex GMT Master II Ref 116710BLNR is available now in some of the Rolex AD in HK

Hi All

Two Places location I know is having this watch:

Mong Kok Hing Wah, there is One in the window, marked Cash price. HKD$65,300
Stock level :2 pieces 3 Nov 2013.

Oriental Watch Company TST store at Holiday Inn Shopping Arcade HKD$65,300 no discount
card and cash same,
Stock Level : One piece
4 Nov.

GO and try your good luck!

HK Snob
Tsim Sha Tsui Kong Tsan Snob
LED Fever
Mong Kok Kong Tsan Snob

An Unisex 1975 Georg Jesen Watch




Is this watch Lovely!??
Mechanical manual winding watch, Chopard Movement. Mirror dial.

HK Snob
Watch Fever
Kong Tsan Snob
LED Fever

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Rolex DateJust with the Rarest Dial of Lapis Azuli Dial, with Bubble Diamond and the Most LUCKY model No. 16233...more...






What can you buy with HKD$60,000 for A Rolex?
Probably an Explorer II, a Submariner, a Stainless steel Date Just, of a Milgauss Green Glass!

Can you buy a Two Tone Rolex? I'm sorry, you have to pay a bit more.

Can
you buy a Lapis Azuli dial with diamond? Well, I do not think so!
Nowaday, a Date Just 36mm men Two tone with 10 diamond on MOP Ref 116234 list price is $92,200.


Well, this is what, NOS Rolex Ref 16233 men 36mm Date Just Two Tone Yellow gold and steel, with Lapis Blue diamond, Jubilee Strap, How much!? HKD$72,950 list price.... before the "Discount!"

This is a discontinued item still using the old price. There was two sold alreay in this year and Still have three left...

People know Lapis blue know what they are and if you think this is not the most value for money Rolex we can buy today, tell me what else would be!

Being a Chinese who does not like this Ref 16233!?? nice model number!  The Colour of the Lapis Blue dial is unique. No wonder Dala Lama like Lapis Blue Dial Rolex!

Check when stock still last in one of the Rolex AD....!

HK Snob
Sham Shui Po Kong Tsan
Kong Tsan

LED fever

Rolex Special bulletin Release No. 1 Daytona

A 140 pages of content with some of watch columnists' article on Daytona, Story of Daytona, Watch Collection, design speciality of 4130 movement.

A free gift from Rolex AD., go and get one...when stock lasts.

HK Snob
Watch fever

Another Killer Rolex, rare Ref 19019 White Gold OysterQuartz Day Date














Osvaldo Patrizzi belived that there are only 1,000 pieces of Ref 19019 made!



Needless to say, this is one of my favourite Rolex Watches. A Day Date in White gold with Super Accuracy no other Rolex non Quartz Rolex can beat it.

Friend of mine who purposely SHOW OFF yesterday during our regular Tea-Watch Gathering.

Price of such an super excellent condition watch is in the range of HKD$95,000-115,000.

Note the Special OysterQuartz box, itself is a collectible item.

Kong Tsan Snob
Watch Fever

Manual Winding Automatic Watch Winder

There is watch Maniac who had once purchased an Audemars Piguet Perpetual Calendar, there is a free Auto Watch Winder with size of a shoe box comes with the expensive Watch.
However that special dry battery cells only can be available at AP AD, it is HKD$250 for the pack of battery that it may be used for a period of three months.
So Friend of mine modified the AP Auto watch winder with a hand crank like mechanism. He saves up the battery cell un-used.
So every time he left office for home, first thing he does is to put the watch with a price of BMW 530 into the watch winder, and manually rotate the handle to wind up the Winder with that AP watch!

He Does it everyday!

HK Snob
Watch fever
HK Kong Tsan Fever

Friday, November 1, 2013

JEANRICHARD Aquascope "Boat Race" model, Limited with just 160 pieces


JEANRICHARD launches LIMITED EDITION Aquascope Watch as OXFORD and CAMBRIDGE accept the 2014 BNY Mellon Boat Race challenge.

On 24 October 2013, at the Autumn Reception held at the BNY Mellon Headquarters and accompanied by the official timekeeper JEANRICHARD in London, the Oxford and Cambridge University Boat Clubs accepted the new challenge acknowledging the start of 2014 season. They agreed to face each other on the Thames on Sunday 6 April 2014 in a challenge laid down by the Cambridge University Boat Club President after they lost in 2013.


As the Official timekeeper of the famous rowing competition, JEANRICHARD participated in these kick-start proceedings. The new Aquascope model designed in the race’s traditional colours, with a minutecircle and double hour-marker at 12 o’clock reproducing the two shades of blue corresponding to the two teams (Dark Blue for Oxford, Light Blue for Cambridge), a blue rubber strap with a finely-ribbed surface, and a seconds hand adorned with an arrow referring to the logo of the Race.

Technical specifications:
Polished and vertically satin-finished stainless steel case with blue PVD coating
Circular satin-finished stainless steel bezel
Unidirectional rotating bezel
44.00 mm
Height: 13.05 mm
Antireflective sapphire crystal
Case-back, screwed-down, engraved
Screwed-down crown
Water-resistant to 300 m
Movement JR60,
self-winding
Calibre: 11 ½’’’
Frequency: 28,800 vibrations/hour (4 Hz)
Jewels: 26
Power reserve: minimum 38 hours
Functions: hour, minute, second, date
Grey vertically satin-finished dial with “The BNY
Mellon Boat Race Oxford and Cambridge” inscription
Applied rhodium-coated indexes with luminescent material
Light and dark blue indexes at 12 o’clock
Light and dark blue minute-circle
Rhodium-coated hands with luminescent material
Blue rubber strap
Stainless steel folding buckle
Limited and numbered edition: 160 pieces
 


Available from November 2013 at authorized JEANRICHARD sales outlets.
Aquascope “Boat Race” model with its self-winding movement.

What I like about this watch is the Satin fine line dial, they are made as a simple way to carry out the touch up for a sport watch design, the size is 44mm, bold and large, clearly to tell the time, big bezel that could not be ambiguous in tell the timer.
Antireflective Sapphire crystal, and Big Hour Pointer is a nice feature. If there is shoulder beside the crown would be a step close to perfect.
Blue is the Colour of the year for Watch, it is never lose the pace in keeping up the fashion. The Red Pointer second is a Icing on the cake.
I am Checking what Special Number we have in HK JR AD so that we can reserve one!
HK Kong Tsan
Watch Fever

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Hong Kong should be proud of itself, being a small city and is world largest Consumption of Luxury Watches!


Hong Kong consumes about 40% of World's Luxury Watch every year. Being the World's Largest Watch Market.
No wonder why the Swiss watch company would have selected Hong Kong as the 2nd location outside Switzerland for World Watch Fair last month. 

Hong Kong Watch Snob,
Hong Kong Watch Fever

The Evolution of Luxary Watch











This is an interesting website that tell the deveopment of the Luxary watch since 1735 Blanpain...up to the latest watch maker. Of course , this is a simplified one. As we can not see may of the so call luxary watch like 1995's Roger Dubuis...

This is original Website, go and see

http://www.thewatchgallery.com/assets/MAGAZINE/evolution-of-the-luxury-watch.jpg

HK Snob
HK Watch Fever

Rob Brown was accused using a fraudulent Credit card to purchase Movado watch in Macy's NY.





Rob Brown was arrested and handcuffed for using Fake AMEX card buying a Movado Watch At Macy’s
Rob Brown, actor known for his work on the HBO show Treme and from movies like Finding Forrester, Coach Carter, and the recent release, Don Jon, says that he was arrested this summer by officers in Macys in Herald Square after purchasing a $1, 350 Movado watch as a graduation present for his mother.
While making a purchase there, Brown says he was approached by officers out of uniform who arrested him and accused him of using a fake card to buy the watch in Macy’s. He was handcuffed and walked into a holding area for shoplifters inside of Macy’s on an upstairs level.
“They kept telling me, ‘Your card is fake. You’re going to jail,” Brown said in an interview AC360 CNN Yesterday.
After 45 minutes and checking through the actor’s bags, police realized they made a mistake and let him go. Though he was late because of the incident, Brown says he was able to make it to his mother’s graduation (police gave him a ride), but that didn’t stop him from sharing his distaste over the incident on Twitter soon after back in June and the case was on CNN yesterday AC360.
There is many repeated cases that Racial profiling is common in a Country Like USA. What if this case could happened in HK.
I can tell you : NEVER! As Hong Kong Shop keeper look for Money, don't care who you are, of Course if you care Chinese from China would be service like you are emperor.
This is the rank of preferred list of customers from my personal understanding
1.       Mainlander from China, age >45, crew cut men, not necessary well dress up.
2.       Mainlander from China, age >30 women, well Decorated with luxury brands  on the
           body; Bag, Shoes , dress
3.       Singaporean age >50 men wearing Gold Rolex
4.       Malaysian Chinese, Age about 50, walking in with a pretty Young lady
5.       Thai men, age about 50, wearing a massive gold Chain with size like the one to moor
           Star Cruise Ship.
6.       Korean
7.       Taiwanese
8.       Japanese
9.       Kong Tsan
10.  
11. ...
...
...

998. Burundi
999. Zimbabwe
1000. Democratic Republic of the Congo
      1001. HK Snob, Watch fever


HK Snob
HK Kong Tsan, Watch Fever
Sham Shui Po Kong Tsan Watch Snob

This is the guy I met Today.... Firday The Thirty First not Friday The Thirteenth...




This is good friend of mine, Gerrald Boyles who works in a famous Texas Steak house running by a Japanese in Alabang.
This is a restaurant I like going for lunch with Customer.
Picture taken by Samsung Note II LTE 31 Oct 2013


Guess what kind of watch he wears, this is it? Wow! Are you kidding? Yes, of course this is Friday Halloween day, his watch must be black and have a sense of mystery…sharp edges…good contrast!




 Photography Courtesy of  Watch What-If section here on aBlogtoRead.com.


This is Original Rolex Sky-Sweller Design


How do you like this watch design, I think it is nice and I want to get one too if that is available. Definitely not from Rolex as Rolex never product anything Black or Coated with hardened chrome!
No! this is the design work of Beau Hudspeth who does the artwork and concepting after he choose the models and styles to focus on. The Rolex SkyDweller.
Have a Happy Halloween Day!

from
HK Kong Tsan, HK Watch Fever, HK Snob
Sham Shui Po Kong Tsan Snob.
Ap Liu Street Kong Tsan
Tsim Sha Tsui Kong Tsan Snob
LED Fever, HK Snob

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Timepiece history from Water Clock, Hour Glass, Mechanical Wrist Watch, Quartz Watch to the one you are wearing...


A 2- mins, 4 mins, 6 mins modern Hour glass


From Watch Clock, Hour Glass Mechanical Watch, Quartz Watch… A Time measurement History.

Water clocks, also known as clepsydrae, along with the sundials, are possibly the oldest time-measuring instruments, with the only exceptions being the vertical gnomon and the day counting tally stick.

When they first existed is not known and perhaps unknowable. The bowl-shaped outflow is the simplest form of a water clock and is known to have existed in Babylon and in Egypt around the 16th century BC. Other regions of the world, including India and China, also have early evidence of water clocks, but the earliest dates are less certain. Some authors, told water clocks appearing as early as 4000 BC in these regions of the world.

The Greek and Roman civilizations are credited for initially advancing water clock design to include complex gearing, which was connected to fanciful automata and also resulted in improved accuracy. These advances were passed on through Byzantium and Islamic times, eventually making their way back to Europe. Independently, the Chinese developed their own advanced water clocks(水鐘)in 725 A.D., passing their ideas on to Korea and Japan.

From the 15th century onwards, Hour Glasses were being used in a range of applications at sea, in the church, in industry and in cookery.

During the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan around the globe, his vessels kept 18 hourglasses per ship. It was the job of a ship's page to turn the hourglasses and thus provide the times for the ship's log. Noon was the reference time for navigation, which did not depend on the glass, as the sun would be at its zenith. More than one hourglass was sometimes fixed in a frame, each with a different running time, for example 1 hour, 45 minutes, 30 minutes, and 15 minutes.

While some hourglasses actually did use sand as the granular mixture to measure time, many did not use sand at all. The material used in most bulbs was a combination of "powdered marble, tin/lead oxides, and pulverized, burnt eggshell". Over time, different textures of granule matter were tested to see which gave the most constant flow within the bulbs. It was later discovered that for the perfect flow to be achieved the ratio of granule bead to the width of the bulb neck needed to be 1/12 or more but not greater than 1/2 the neck of the bulb.

The word clock (from the Celtic words clocca and clogan, both meaning "bell"), which gradually supersedes "horologe", suggests that it was the sound of bells which also characterized the prototype mechanical clocks that appeared during the 13th century in Europe.

Watches evolved in the 17th century from spring powered clocks, which appeared in the 15th century. The first watches were strictly mechanical. As technology progressed, the mechanisms used to measure time have, in some cases, been replaced by use of quartz vibrations or electronic pulses.

Early wrist watch by Waltham, worn by soldiers in World War I (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 47-3352) A watch is a timepiece, typically worn either around the wrist or attached on a chain and carried in a pocket. Wristwatches are the most common type of watch used today.

In 1959 Seiko gave an order to Epson (a daughter company of Seiko and the actual brain behind the quartz revolution) to start developing a quartz wristwatch. The project was codenamed 59A and by the 1964 Tokyo Summer Olympics, Seiko had a working prototype of a portable quartz watch which took part in time measurements throughout the event.

The first prototypes of an electronic quartz wristwatch (not just portable quartz watches as the Seiko timekeeping devices at the Tokyo Olympics in 1964) were made by the CEH research laboratory in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. From 1965 through 1967 pioneering development work was done on a miniaturized 8192 Hz quartz oscillator, a thermo-compensation module and an in house-made, dedicated integrated circuit (unlike the hybrid circuits used in the later Seiko Astron wristwatch). As a result, the BETA 1 prototype set new timekeeping performance records at the International Chronometric Competition held at the Observatory of Neuchâtel in 1967.

Quartz Movement of the Seiko Astron, 1969 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2010-006) The first quartz watch to enter production was the Seiko 35 SQ Astron, which hit the shelves on December 25, 1969. As the technology had been developed by the Swiss, Seiko could not patent the whole movement of the quartz wristwatch, thus allowing other manufacturers to benefit from the technology.

All watches provide the time of day, giving at least the hour and minute, and usually the second. Most also provide the current date, and often the day of the week as well. However, many watches also provide a great deal of information beyond the basics of time and date. Some watches include alarms. Other elaborate and more expensive watches, both pocket and wrist models, also incorporate striking mechanisms or repeater functions, so that the wearer could learn the time by the sound emanating from the watch. This announcement or striking feature is an essential characteristic of true clocks and distinguishes such watches from ordinary timepieces. This feature is available on most digital watches.

1990 and onwards, a complicated watch has one or more functions beyond the basic function of displaying the time and the date; such a functionality is called a complication. Two popular complications are the chronograph complication, which is the ability of the watch movement to function as a stopwatch, and the moonphase complication, which is a display of the lunar phase. Other more expensive complications include Tourbillon, Perpetual calendar, Minute repeater, and Equation of time. A truly complicated watch has many of these complications at once (see Calibre 89 from Patek Philippe for instance). Some watches can both indicate the direction of Mecca and have alarms that can be set for all daily prayer requirements. Among watch enthusiasts, complicated watches are especially collectible. Some watches include a second 12-hour or 24-hour display for UTC or GMT. Many new complications with double tourbillon, quad tourbillion, spherical motion tourbillion, digital display driven by servo Quartz system. Differential Liquid pressure to generate power to push for a mechanical watch, and many other weird way to make up a “Watch”- but one thing is unchanged, a device to tell time Hour, Minute and Second.

In my opinion, a Watch with Hour hand, Minute hand, plus a Date is juts good enough, but it got to be made by rather precious metal, and has a perpetual Style that can last.
HK Snob
Kong Tsan Watch Fever
Sham Shui Po Snob
LED Fever

Monday, October 28, 2013

The China Mainlander swipped way 200 Rolex Watches in One Rolex AD a day in Hong Kong!


One Rolex Shop in Times Square sold 200 Rolex in one day back in 2011 to Chinese Big Spenders!


“The Kong Tsan and the Locusts”
Hong Kong, A Dynamic City of no sleep, now is it going to be dead…

Hong Kongers are subtly losing their energy of original Hong Kongers, working style like we were in 80s.

Especially after it was crippled by the bird flu epidemic in 1997 and the SARS crisis in 2003. The Rolex store at Times Square sells 200 watches a day, mostly to mainlanders in 2011.


Where it was once Hong Kong that sent food packages to China in its time of need and supported the Chinese real estate market through investment, the table has turned: It’s China that helps keep Hong Kong afloat these days, the mainlanders flocking to the metropolis to buy its real estate and watches in Auction, often in cash, since credit cards still account for only a fraction of retail purchases in China.

Growing up, we felt superior to the Chinese. In Hong Kong people joke about how the mainland’s nouveau riche mixed Chateau Laffite with 7-ups. In one case a mainlander is said to have toted a bag of cash into a fancy boutique and blurted, “Where’s the most expensive stuff?” Stories like these support the long-held stereotype of the mainlanders as Ah Tsan, or country bumpkins, but as we point out, today the city’s Gucci and Chanel stores have long lines in front, a trail of seemingly endless demand. “There’ll always be the next group of mainland farmers who’ve made it big,”

This shift in economic power has exacerbated Hong Kong’s identity crisis, to the point where it is now the mainlanders who refer to their Hong Kong brethren as Kong Tsan, or Hong Kong bumpkins. Most residents view themselves first as Hong Kongers, not Chinese, underscoring a growing resentment toward mainlanders, who were referred to in a Hong Kong newspaper ad as “locusts” swarming the territory. Nearly half the babies born in Hong Kong’s reputable hospitals in 2011 belonged to mainlanders.

At a Canton Road Dolce & Gabbana store, Hong Kong residents were banned from taking pictures in front of the store’s window display. In response, over a thousand Hong Kongers gathered in the street in front of the store to demand an apology, while venting pent-up frustration that they were being treated as second-class citizens in their own home.

There is a renowned Watch Shop in Tsim Sha Tsui, that one night, one Mainlander came in and started to smoke, one HKer told him not to… and he continued his shopping, the Hong Konger complained o the shop keeper allowing customer to smoke. Well, the shopkeeper signaled the Hong Konger to go away immediately and he would close the door just to serve the Mainlander only as he was intending to buy a Rolex valued HKD$200,000!

Tensions are building, layer upon layer in the floating city. Visitors see Hong Kong as the emerald city on the mountain, but it’s an ailing city. The head is not working right. The limbs don’t work.
Kong Tsan
HK Snob
Watch Fever
Sham Shui Po Snob
Tsim Sha Tsui Kong Tsan

问君能有几多愁,恰似一群太监上青楼…How pathetic it would be like a bunches of eunuchs meeting those pretty young ladies at the brothel."







问君能有几多愁,恰似一群太监上青楼…
English translation is "

How pathetic it would be like a bunches of eunuchs meeting those pretty young ladies at the brothel."
 
This is what I see people wearing some of the best watches I am dreaming, sometimes it is hard to feel that limited resources cannot satisfy unlimited desire to possess something. Like a beautiful dream watch Rolex Day Date Lapis Blue dial platinum…..a beautiful Dream Pen  1929 Patrician Turquoise , a nice dream Car Acura NSX 1993 in Red, a beautiful dream lady… she , she and she…
What can we do?
Just… let it be… and keep dreaming.
As something the pleasure of finding the treasure is more enjoyable to have that treasure found…
Really, sometimes I feel like:
问君能有几多愁,恰似一群太监上青楼…”!
HK Snob
Watch Fever
Sham Shui po Snob
Ap Liu Street Snob