Atmos Transparente

Image
Atmos Transparente - Jaeger-LeCoultre
The Atmos Transparente clock displays a strikingly sober new face.

From every angle – front, side or back – the vision is captivating and the equilibrium is perfect. The dial is embellished by an Art Deco-style. The base is satin brushed and rhodium plated. Thanks to a very simple mechanism invented by engineer Jean-Léon Reutter in 1928 and brought to market by Jaeger-LeCoultre in the 1930s, the Atmos clock lives on air. Always as constant, always as accurate.

The new glass dial sets off its twelve hour-markers particularly well. Fine, perfectly straight, and of a deep black, they stand out sharply within this beautifully pared-back design. Two great, circling hands of the same colour mark off the passing hours and minutes. Strict, almost minimalist in their lines, these quintessential attributes form a harmonious contrast to the rounded fullness of the dial. These straight lines are housed within a circle, which itself sits inside a rectangle. 

Atmos Transparente

The virtually perpetual movement enjoys another occasion to reveal the mechanical genius and exceptional accuracy that characterise it. A secret that is hidden in plain sight: just a single degree of variation in the room temperature, and the Atmos clock captures enough power to run for two entire days. The Jaeger-LeCoultre Calibre 563 can be admired from every angle. Each face of its transparent cabinet has been treated with a new anti-reflective coating.

The Atmos Transparente clock is priced at CHF 9750.

Atmos Transparente

Featured brand
Jaeger-LeCoultre