Hautlence Labyrinth 01: Time to A-Maze

Hautlence Labyrinth 01, Playground Collection. Introduced in 2016, it features Hautlence’s in-house movement with mechanical lift including bevel gears. The dial is in solid gold and the game ball is in platinum. The titanium case is 37mm by 43.5mm and is 13mm thick and is water-resistant to 3 atm. Limited to 18 pieces and Recommended retail price: CHF12,000. The Labyrinth is also available in a version with a labyrinth dial in solid white gold that is limited to 18 pieces. Photo: © TANG Portfolio.

Hautlence Labyrinth 01, Playground Collection. Introduced in 2016, it features
Hautlence’s in-house movement with mechanical lift including bevel gears. The dial is in solid gold and the game ball is in platinum. The titanium case is 37mm by 43.5mm and is 13mm thick and is water-resistant to 3 atm. Limited to 18 pieces and Recommended retail price: CHF12,000. The Labyrinth is also available in a version with a labyrinth dial in solid white gold that is limited to 18 pieces. Photo: © TANG Portfolio.

At a glance, the Hautlence Labyrinth looks like a complicated wristwatch. However, the catch is that it isn’t a wristwatch as it doesn’t tell the time because there is no watch movement in it.

It is better defined as a “wristgame”. Why?

Take a second look and you’d notice that the dial is actually a maze and there is a ball inside (at around the seven o’clock position in the image above), well actually, you may say it is a luxury-class ball as it is in forged platinum. This is actually a-ball-in-a-maze puzzle.

However, there is still an in-house Hautlence mechanical movement housed within the generous 37mm by 43.5mm case in grade 5 titanium that is 13mm thick.

There are nine jewels for in-house movement – the mechanical lift that transports the platinum ball via a camshaft system up onto the dial – thereby feeding it onto the game board or the maze on the dial.

The camshaft system can be viewed through the transparent case back.

Once the ball is in the maze, it is up to you to guide it through the maze by manoeuvring your wrist. The objective is to bring the ball back to its “cubby-hole”.

“The game is pulled from Sandro Reginelli’s youth as a reminder of the out-dated games he played when he visited his grandparents,” the brand explains. Sandro Reginelli is co-founder and CEO of Hautlence.

Oh yes, take note of the rectangular case as that is the signature shape of Hautlence wristwatches from its early beginnings in 2004.

The good folks at Hautlence make no bones about this product of theirs. It is what they clearly state as L’objet inutile parfaitement indispensable or “an entirely essential yet fundamentally useless object.”

The “useless” part is what many will understand; as for the “essential”, it allows you to immerse in a game providing a necessary and pleasant slowness”, the brand explains.

Actually, such a game albeit a luxury version, may not be entirely “useless” for those who can afford one. This is a game that can help one de-stress.

Everyone faces stress in some form or another, whether at the workplace or in the home. The effects of stress can have negative health implications such as problems related to one’s mood, sleep patterns, appetite and even heart problems.

In an indirect manner, stress may also lead us to unhealthy behaviours such as the consumption of unhealthy food, alcohol and taking up smoking.

In the article “5 ways to de-stress and help your heart”, from the Harvard Medical School, much can be learnt to manage stress. What are their five tips offered to deal with stress?
1. Stay positive;
2. Meditate;
3. Exercise;
4. Unplug; and
5. Find ways to take the edge off your stress.

Points 4 and 5 are particularly relevant to the Labyrinth. Take it from the Harvard Medical School article which states for point 4: “It’s impossible to escape stress when it follows you everywhere. Cut the cord. Avoid emails and TV news. Take time each day – even if it’s for just 10 or 15 minutes – to escape from the world.”

For point 5, the article offers advice such as taking a warm bath, listening to music or spending time on a favourite hobby can give you a break from the stressors in your life.

Playing with the Hautlence Labyrinth for five minutes of less might just be the answer. Stress follows you everywhere and so can the Labyrinth on your wrist.

This luxury game, which may offer the wearer a form of health benefit, is limited to 18 pieces each in either white gold or titanium.

Hautlence Labyrinth 01
Playground Collection
Introduced in 2016
Technical Specifications:

• Hautlence in-house movement with mechanical lift including bevel gears
• 9 jewels
• Movement sand-blasted, vertical satin finish with diamond-lapped angles
• Labyrinth dial in solid 5N gold with vertical satin-finish, diamond-lapped angles and polished platinum ball
• Forged platinum ball
• Case middle in grade 5 titanium, satin-finished
• Extra-hard bevelled sapphire crystal with anti-reflective treatment
• 37mm by 43.5mm by 13mm case in grade 5 titanium
• Water-resistant to 3 atm
• Case back in satin-finished grade 5 titanium, 6 screws, engraved with “Hautlence”, “Horlogerie Suisse”, “Playground-Labyrinth 01”
• Brown satin-finished Louisiana alligator leather strap with large square circles, hand-sewn rolled edge
Limited to 18 pieces
Recommended retail price: CHF12,000
Note:
Also available in a version with a labyrinth dial in solid white gold, limited to 18 pieces.

Richard Mille RM 67-01 Extra Flat: Extra Special

Richard Mille RM 67-01 Extra Flat. Introduced in 2016, the RM 67-01 features a new in-house designed Calibre CRMA6 automatic movement. The movement’s height is 3.6mm. The slim case is 7.75mm thick. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

Richard Mille RM 67-01 Extra Flat. Introduced in 2016, the RM 67-01 features a new in-house designed Calibre CRMA6 automatic movement. The movement’s height is 3.6mm. The slim case is 7.75mm thick. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

All things considered, the Richard Mille RM 67-01 is extra special simply because the extra-flat movement, the Calibre CRMA6, is presented in the brand’s signature tonneau case.

The CRMA6 automatic movement has a thickness of 3.6mm and is a new calibre that was designed in-house by Richard Mille’s engineers in Les Breleux, Switzerland.

Didn’t Richard Mille offer extra-flat watches before? Yes, there is the RM 016 (with the case thickness of 8.25mm) that is housed in a rectangular case and the RM 033 (6.3mm thick) which is in a round case.

“We have remedied this lacuna with a nod to our early days,” says Richard Mille the gentleman the brand is named after.

While some may argue that a tonneau watchcase is rectangular, do note that there is a distinction made between a rectangular form and the barrel- or tonneau shape.

The case dimensions of the Richard Mille RM 67-01 are 38.7mm by 47.52mm by 7.75mm. And no, that is not the numeral “zero” after the Arabic numeral 4 and before the Arabic numeral 6. That is the date display window. The function indicator for winding, date and hand setting is between 1 and 2 o’clock. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

The case dimensions of the Richard Mille RM 67-01 are 38.7mm by 47.52mm by 7.75mm. And no, that is not an extra large numeral “zero” after the Arabic numeral 4 and before the Arabic numeral 6. That is the date display window. The function indicator for winding, date and hand setting is between 1 and 2 o’clock. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

In fact, between 2001 and 2007, Richard Mille had only produced tonneau watchcases. This established an identity for the brand that is now well-recognised for its tonneau-shaped cases.

The vertical date display window is located on the bottom right corner at the 5 o’clock position. Given that this is a two-hand watch without a sweep seconds hand (which contributes to the slimness), how complex is the RM 67-01?

The 38.7mm by 47.52mm case of the Richard Mille RM 67-01 with the thickness of 7.75mm requires almost six hours of machining time, 68 different stamping operation just for its bezel, case band and rear bezel.

The winding rotor is in platinum. The brand claims that the case of the RM 67-01 is one of the most time-consuming and complex watchcases ever to be made in Switzerland. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

The winding rotor is in platinum. The brand claims that the case of the RM 67-01 is one of the most time-consuming and complex watchcases ever to be made in Switzerland. Photo: © TANG Portfolio. Elfa / Timmy. 2016 Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.

The machine tooling process requires 8 days of machine adjustments for the bezel, 5 days for the case band and 5 days for the rear bezel. Developing a methodology for the operations took 145 hours, drawings for the tools 130 hours and implementation another 180 hours.

Moreover, each case requires more than 215 separate machining operations. That is not all, the case will also undergo hand brushing and polishing, the assembly of the sapphire glass and sealants. Such processes take up a further 8 hours of work.

In fact, more time is required to produce this case than other similar ones. This explains why the brand claims that the RM 67-01 tonneau watchcase is one of the most time consuming and complex cases ever to be produced in Switzerland.

Richard Mille RM 67-01 Extra Flat
Introduced in 2016
Technical Specifications:
• Calibre CRMA6 automatic movement
• Movement thickness: 3.6mm
• Winding rotor in platinum
• Baseplate and bridges made from grade 5 titanium
• Case dimensions: 38.7mm by 47.52mm by 7.75mm
Note:
Richard Mille claims that this is one of the most time-consuming and complex watchcases ever to be created in Switzerland.