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patek_philippe_officer_s_watch

Patek Philippe Officer's Watch

Patek Philippe Calatrava Ref. 5153G, showing the Officer's case and lugs\\ © Patek Philippe (click to enlarge!)
Patek Philippe Calatrava Ref. 5153G, showing the Officer's case and lugs
© Patek Philippe

Patek Philippe has produced a number of watches in the officer's watch style, and frequently uses this term to describe these models.

Patek Philippe rose to prominence after World War I, but many Patek watches were used in the war. Some decades later, a new style of watch appeared, called the officer's watch, and evocative of the watches used at that time and on naval vessels since then. A true Officer's Watch has a round case with a simple dial, typically including small seconds and sector dial, a large onion crown, scrolled lugs with a screw-in strap bar, and often a hinged (“Officer's”) solid case back.

Patek created an Officer's Calatrava for their 150th anniversary in 1989, and this limited-edition watch proved very popular with collectors. Shortly after, Patek introduced an unlimited Calatrava model, Ref. 5022, which included some of the features and style of that limited-edition piece. This quickly became known as the “officer's case” Calatrava and sold in large numbers. A “Lady Officer's” model, Ref. 4860, was closer in style and included screwed lug bars.

In 2001, Patek Philippe introduced a new Calatrava, Ref. 5053 in a larger size and including the hinged case back made popular with Ref. 3960. This became the new definitive Patek Officer's Watch, though the use of center seconds was not in keeping with the style. The complicated Ref. 5054 used the same case but added a moon phase and power reserve indicator, cluttering the dial somewhat. Ref. 5053 was replaced with the up-sized Ref. 5153 in 2009, now at 38 mm and still with center seconds but adding a date window. This reference eschews the clean dials of previous officer's watches and includes a striking guilloche center on all models. A new Ladies Officer, Ref. 7200, was introduced in 2013 with screwed bars but with no cover over the fixed sapphire case back.

Patek Philippe has also used the officer's style on a number of non-Calatrava watches in recent years, including many that they classify as Grand Complications. Ref. 5159 (and the similar Ref. 5160) include a retrograde perpetual calendar with moon phase as well as a hinged case back over a sapphire window. Minute Repeater Ref. 5213 includes a retrograde perpetual calendar and minute repeater, while Minute Repeater Tourbillon, Ref. 5539 eliminates the calendar but includes both a minute repeater and tourbillon. Split-Seconds Chronograph, Ref. 5959 is a high-complication split-seconds mono-pusher chronograph. On the Ladies side, Patek has two “Ladies First” models Minute Repeater Ref. 7000 and Split-Seconds Chronograph Ref. 7059.

Patek Philippe References

  • 3960 (1989) Small seconds, “150th Anniversary” model with hinged case back
  • 4860 (1990's) No seconds, “Lady Officer's” screwed lugs, fixed case back
  • 5022 (1990's) Small seconds, often called “Officers” but without hinged case back or screwed lugs
  • 5053 (2001-2009) - 36 mm, center seconds, automatic, “Officer's Case” with hinged case back
  • 5054 (2000's) - 36 mm, small seconds at 4 30, moon phase and date pointer subdial at 7 00, power reserve at 10 30, automatic Cal. 240, “Officer's Case” with hinged case back
  • 5153 (2009-present) - 38 mm, center seconds, automatic, date, “Officer's Watch” with hinged case back
  • 5159, 5160 (2000's) Center seconds, retrograde perpetual calendar with moon phase, automatic, hinged case back (not called a Calatrava)
  • Minute Repeater 5213 Retrograde perpetual calendar and minute repeater (not called a Calatrava)
  • Minute Repeater Tourbillon 5539 Minute repeater, tourbillon (not called a Calatrava)
  • Split-Seconds Chronograph 5959 Split-seconds mono-pusher chronograph (not called a Calatrava)
  • Minute Repeater 7000 (Ladies automatic minute repeater) Officer's style case with screwed bars, fixed sapphire case back, not called a Calatrava
  • Split-Seconds Chronograph 7059 (Ladies automatic chronograph) Officer's style case with screwed bars, fixed sapphire case back, not called a Calatrava
  • 7200 (2013) (Ladies automatic, no seconds, Cal. 240) Officer's style case with screwed bars, fixed sapphire case back

See Also

patek_philippe_officer_s_watch.txt · Last modified: 03.07.2022 15:37 by 127.0.0.1

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