Watches — Dispatch
The Dial That Disappears Into You
Skin-tone stone. Quiet. Personal.
By Chasing Seconds · APRIL 7, 20261 minute read

Photo · aBlogtoWatch
A skin-tone stone dial doesn't demand attention — it just makes everyone else's watch look like it's trying too hard. Sartory-Billard figured out what the big houses haven't: the most personal thing a watch can do is feel like it was made for your wrist specifically.
End — Filed from the desk
§ More from Watches
Keep reading watches.

Watches
The Market Is Not the Watch
Secondary data, primary confusion

Watches
The Watch World Has a Blind Spot, and It's the Size of India
Titan's wandering hour automatic isn't a curiosity. It's a signal.

Watches
REC Finally Stopped Shouting About the Car
The 98T/4 is what happens when a concept matures into a watch.
§ Across the magazine
From the other desks.

Cars
The Roads Got Brighter. Driving Got Harder.
Headlight glare isn't a generational gripe — it's a design failure hiding in plain sight.

Fashion
The Crown You Remember Isn't the One He's Wearing
Nostalgia dressed up as a comeback

Tech
The Space Heater That Pays You Back (It Doesn't)
Bitcoin heat, cold math.