Wednesday, February 4, 2009

A. Lange & Söhne - New watches in 2009

LITTLE LANGE 1 MOONPHASE
The treasures of the legendary Green Vault with its amazing inventory of goldsmithing artistry, precious jewels, and exotic materials inspired the LITTLE LANGE 1 MOONPHASE. Its dial is faced with scintillating mother-of-pearl, and the noble 18-carat white gold case is studded with 58 brilliant-cut diamonds.

The LITTLE LANGE 1 MOONPHASE is an expressive companion that takes its place on an elegant lady’s wrist. With a diameter of 36.8 milli-metres, its 18-carat white gold case is well-proportioned. And the 58 sparkling brilliant-cut diamonds that adorn the bezel do their share.


The mother-of-pearl dial accommodates the off-centre time, date, power-reserve, and moon-phase displays. With a choice of two different versions, each in limited editions of only 150 watches, it also under-scores the taste and individuality of its owner. In dark blue, the dial seems as unfathomable as the infinite nocturnal sky. In white, it is open and radiant like a glistening full moon.


The moon-phase display of this precious timepiece emulates the earth’s satellite in two ways: on the one hand, Lange’s lunar disc moves just as continuously as the real celestial body. On the other, the mechanism is calculated with such precision that when the movement runs without interruption, it takes all of 122 years for the display to deviate from the true position of the moon by one day.

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Model in 18-carrot white gold

Movement: Calibre L901.9. Manually wound.
Moon-phase display. Patented outsize date.
72 hours power reserve. Stop seconds.
Dial: Solid silver, dark blue, faced with mother-of-pearl. Hands: Rhodiumed gold.
Case: 58 brilliant-cut diamonds, approx. 0.9 carats. Diameter 36.8 mm. Height 10.0 mm. Sapphire-crystal glass and caseback. Ray leather strap.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

High Quality Replicas

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Thursday, February 21, 2008

The Highly Sought After A. Lange & Sohne Datograph Watch


The A. Lange & Sohne watches Datograph is a modern "Holy Grail" for many dedicated timepiece afficionados. Along with the rival Patek Philippe 5070 watches, this chronograph has become a near-cult item amongst collectors of ultra high-end chronographs and for good reason: the Datograph watch is an extraordinarily beautiful classic chronograph, whose Manufacture movement represents the very finest in traditional Saxon haute horlogerie.

Even a brief glance through the sapphire crystal window in the Datograph's caseback leaves an unmistakable confirmation of something truly remarkable. The A. Lange & Sohne Datograph watch's hand-wound L951.1 movement is an absolute delight to the eye, in both its mechanical intricacy and unsparing degree of painstaking hand finish. The densely packed, yet perfectly organized structure of German silver bridges and perfectly finished steel chronograph levers offers a three-dimensional visual feast, which reveals more secrets under closer scrutiny. Each of the bridges is decorated with Glashutte ribbing, and the edges are finely chamfered. Other points of admiration are the extraordinary blued-steel screws, four jewels borne in gold chatons, a polished escape wheel cover plate, and a hand-engraved balance cock with a chamfered and polished swan-neck spring. Naturally, this exquisite horizontally-coupled chronograph mechanism is controlled by a column wheel; this perfectly finished component is a prominent star in the mechanism, as it governs the various sequences of the chronograph operation. Not just beautiful to see, the A. Lange & Sohne Datograph watch is equally appealing to the ear, thanks to the classical slow-beat balance wheel, which pulses at an unhurried rate of 18,000 beats per hour.

The A. Lange & Sohne Datograph timepiece offers a number of exclusive complications. The chronograph function, in addition to the normal start-stop-return to zero sequence, offers a flyback complication, enabling the moving center chronograph second hand to be reset to zero without the need to stop it first. The unique precisely jumping minutes counter advances precisely at the turn of each chronograph minute, unlike traditional chronographs, which require up to a full second to complete the switch-over. This precision is the result of a unique A. Lange & Sohne mechanism composed of a lever and a cam, and is also a feature of A. Lange & Sohne's closely related 1815 Chronograph and the even more complicated Double-Split chronograph. At the twelve o'clock position on the dial, the Datograph watch offers the classical A. Lange & Sohne outsize date mechanism, which has become a design signature of the brand; this date display may be precisely advanced manually by pressing the push piece located at 10 o'clock on the watch case.

Beyond the exemplary Manufacture movement and distinctive mechanical complication, this A. Lange & Sohne timepiece embodies timelessly classical aesthetics. Crafted from 18K pink gold, or platinum, the 39mm Datograph watch case is crafted in three parts, with a brushed central section that contrasts sublimely with the polished upper and lower elements, as well as the lugs. The pleasingly proportioned winding crown is elegant, yet offers enough grip to easily undertake the sensuously delightful task of daily hand-winding. A. Lange & Sohne presents the Datograph watch with a wonderfully designed solid silver dial, which has an outer tachymeter scale, and applied Roman numeral hour markers. Yet another example of the remarkable attention to the tenets of classical watchmaking can be found in the graceful hands, whose tips gently curve inwards to the dial. The watch is completed by a hand-stitched crocodile strap with a massive signed A. Lange & Sohne buckle in 18K gold or platinum.

A. Lange & Sohne Arkade: Masterful Saxon High Watchmaking For Women


The A. Lange & Sohne Arkade watch offers discriminating women who are passionate about exceptional watchmaking a uniquely feminine interpretation of supreme Saxon high watchmaking. Not merely a down-sized model of an existing A. Lange & Sohne mens timepiece, the Arkade watch offers sublime details that distinguish it as a singular masterpiece all its own, both by design, and horological technique.
A. Lange & Sohne watches offers the Arkade watch in 18K gold, as well as platinum. In both its shape and name, this beautiful timepiece evokes the baroque architecture of Dresden. Crafted from solid silver, the stunningly classical dial displays a calm elegance that is timeless in its appeal. Proudly located at the top of the dial is the stately patented Lange outsize date display, whose design suggests the famous five-minute digital clock of Dresden's Semper Opera. Truly the definition of utilitarian beauty, this remarkable large date mechanism--itself composed of 66 parts alone--is quickly adjusted by pressing the unobtrusive push-piece found on the right side of the case.

Turning the Arkade watch on its backside reveals the full extent of A. Lange & Sohne's dedication to elite horology. A true sign of manufacture excellence, the Arkade watch houses a superbly crafted manual-winding form movement, which was conceived specifically to fit the unique design of this case. This ticking masterpiece, designated as the L911.4 caliber, displays all the traditional accoutrements of Saxon high watchmaking: the plates and bridges are crafted from untreated German Silver, which has been decorated with Glashutte ribbing. The escape wheel bridge has a polished cover-plate, and three of the jewels are set in gold chatons, which are secured to the plate by meticulously blued screws. Additionally, as a further touch of masterful hand craftsmanship, the Arkade's L911.4 movement features a balance cock which is painstakingly hand engraved.

The A. Lange & Sohne Arkade watch is presented in a range of models in 18K white or yellow gold, as well as in platinum, with certain magnificent versions set with diamonds and other precious gemstones. The timepieces are fitted with superb hand-sewn crocodile straps complete with a massive gold or platinum A. Lange & Sohne watch buckle, unless a matching 18K gold or platinum bracelet is preferred.

Monday, August 6, 2007

Replica Alang & Sohne alan03


alan Alang & Sohne

Stainless steel case, scratch resistant mineral crystal, luminescent hands and markers, day, date, and 24 hour dial. year and month window. thewatchprofessionals.com.

Price:$179

A. Lange & Sohne History

A. Lange Sohne Watch History

"Magnificent" and "bold" are just a few of the superlatives which come to mind when watch lovers describe A. Lange & Sohne timepieces. Reformed in 1994, following the reunification of Germany, this upstart watch company, which is based in Glashutte, has, in just a few short years, established itself as one of the most prestigious luxury watch brands in the world. The company's story is, in many ways, quite compelling.

On December 7, 1845, Adolph Lange set up his own production workshops in Glashutte, near Dresden, laying the foundation of Saxony's - and Germany's - precision-watchmaking industry. For some years, he had been studying ways of producing high-value timepieces of consistent quality in series, and now was the opportunity to realize his ambitions. He started the enterprise with his brother-in-law, the master watchmaker Adolf Schneider, and 15 apprentices.

During his travels, Adolph Lange had drawn meticulously precise plans for new machine tools in his journal/workbook, and had embarked upon the exact determination of movement parts, gearing calculations and conversion tables between the French ligne and the metric system.

His vision and ideas began to take shape. Soon, a fundamental break with many of the traditional artisan techniques became apparent at Adolph Lange's first Glashutte workshops. The introduction of powerful flywheel lathes increased the speed and precision of parts manufacture. His theories on the division of labor encouraged many of his employees over the years to set themselves up in specialist workshops for watch jewels, screws, wheels, mainspring barrels, balance wheels and hands. In this way, Glashutte could become independent from foreign suppliers.

Growing demand for Lange's precision pocket watches, coupled with increasing economic prosperity after the foundation of the German empire, meant that Lange's first workshops soon became too small. Adolph Lange established new facilities for his workforce that had meanwhile grown to almost 60 employees. The buildings, which they occupied in 1873, became the family compound.

The premises accommodated the typical 19th Century business organization of the owner-manager, with the Lange family home and the watch-manufacturing workshops in the same complex. As a unique feature, Adolph Lange built a master clock for the new building. It had a nine-meter pendulum of cedarwood and zinc, which weighed 128 kilos.

The Lange family complex marked the golden age of Lange watchmaking from the end of the Franco-Prussian war in 1871 to the Great Depression. In 1895, a telephone link to the Berlin Observatory was installed to get accurate time signals for a new chronometry workshop that expanded the watchmaking facilities.

It was also during this time that Lange's most beautiful pocket watches were produced - among them, a spectacular Grande Complication repeating pocket watch with split-seconds chronograph, perpetual calendar and moon phase, circa 1908.

The Lange family house was the birthplace of Adolph Lange's grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and it was here that Walter Lange spent his childhood and youth. On May 8, 1945, the main production building - known as the "hangar" - was demolished in a bombing raid. Shortly after it was rebuilt, the A. Lange & Sohne Company was expropriated by the Socialist government and all the buildings seized. Like so many watch companies, the production of high-quality wristwatches and pocket watches came to a grinding halt.

The reunification of Germany gave Walter Lange the courage to claim the legacy of a family tradition that he had given up on. On December 7, 1990, 145 years to the day after his great-grandfather Adolph Lange founded the business, he arrived in Glashutte and started a new company, Lange Uhren GmbH.

The news spread like wildfire - "Herr Lange is back!" Job applications came flooding in; many of the keen young hopefuls presented themselves as descendants of earlier Lange employees whom Walter Lange knew personally. He was thus able to quickly recruit a core workforce from the best craftsmen in Glashutte. It was a far cry from the circumstances surrounding Adolph Lange's endeavor in 1845, when he had to train raw farm lads and simple laborers in the delicate work of watchmaking.

Unfortunately, no suitable factory premises were available, and efforts to reclaim or repurchase the old Lange family buildings were unsuccessful, so it was in the former premises of the precision clock manufacturers, Strasser & Rohde, that the new production facility could be set up. The building was subsequently converted into one of the finest horological workshops, boasting the latest in modern technology, and it was in 1994 that the company produced watches that once again bore the celebrated name of A. Lange & Sohne.

Today, Lange watches are a truly unique product. Although plates, bridges, steel parts, wheels and pinions are cut with exceptional precision by the most advanced computer-aided machine tools, they are always finished, decorated and engraved by hand. Movements are meticulously assembled and adjusted in five positions. Gold or blued steel hands indicate the time and other functions on solid silver dials, and each masterpiece is housed in a case of gold or platinum.

The new-era Lange watches are far from being mere reproductions of the world-renowned timepieces made by Lange before World War II. Yet they bear the imprint and even some of the recognizable features of their predecessors, along with the application of horological complications, which constitutes a particular attraction for enthusiasts and collectors. A few of the company's best known models include the LANGE 1, LANGE 1 TOURBILLON, SAX-O-MAT and LANGEMATIK.

In summary, the name A. Lange & Sohne is a promise of a watch that is different and rare. Its exacting manufactory allows neither compromise nor short cuts - only the highest possible standard of mechanical quality and precision. The costs involved mean that such a watch is not cheap either, but whether old or new, a Lange watch always retains its exclusiveness and will continue to be coveted by watch collectors around the world.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Alang & sohne Original

Lange & Söhne Product Line
Lange 1 watch (model 101.021) The Lange 1 watch (model 101.021) is the flagship of Lange & Söhne. This watch series features extraordinary dial design and exacting Calibre L901 movement. This model features 18K gold case, with manual winding, twin mainspring barrels, power-reserve indicator and patented outsize date. It lists for $22,000.