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Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
Receive 5% Off Your First Order. Now Shipping to Germany.
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One of the most enduring associations between a world-famous star and a legendary timepiece is the one between Elvis Presley and the world's first electric watch, the Hamilton Ventura. A bold horological gamble when it debuted in 1957, the Ventura is now a mainstay of Hamilton's sprawling portfolio of watch families, and the influence of the King of Rock 'n' Roll on its modern incarnations continues to this day. Read on to discover more about the Ventura and the musical icon who made it famous.
Founded in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in 1892, during an era in which the United States was a world leader in timepiece production, the Hamilton Watch Company has played a key role in American watchmaking and innovation throughout the 19th and 20th Centuries — even though the company itself migrated its production to Switzerland in 1969 and became part of the Swiss Swatch Group in 1984. By the early 1950s, Hamilton joined other watchmakers, in the United States and around the world, in the quest to conquer the newest frontier of portable timekeeping – making a wristwatch with a fully electric movement.
It was Hamilton’s U.S.-based competitor, Elgin, which originally took the lead in such a project, along with the family-owned French watchmaker Lip. Elgin’s “Watch of Tomorrow,” which was unveiled as a prototype in Chicago on March 19, 1952, was powered by Caliber 725, a movement with no mainspring or winding mechanism but derived its power instead from a tiny electric motor. That same day, in Paris, Lip announced its own electrical-powered watch, simply named “Electronic,” with similar technology; Elgin and Lip were working together at the time on the projects’ development. However, neither of these watches introduced in 1952 would be ready for commercial release until several years later: Lip’s in 1958, Elgin’s in 1962.
In the interim, Hamilton Watch Company developed its own model, the Ventura, which debuted in 1957, becoming the first electrically powered watch in serial production. It would be historic not only for this accolade but also for its unprecedented and unconventional design, which was like nothing seen before or since in the watch world. The Ventura’s asymmetrical, curvilinear case — which has been compared to that of a boomerang, a shield, and a triangle, among many other descriptors — was the conception of American car designer Richard Arbib, who’d also worked on military contracts during World War II; the Ventura’s distinctive case shape, Arbib revealed years later, was originally based on a bomb design. The movement, Caliber 500, contained a battery, magnets, and an electric coil, rather than a traditional mechanical mainspring, to drive the gear train and move the hands. The first Venturas were decidedly marketed as luxury products rather than just technical curiosities: the earliest models were available only with yellow-gold cases and bracelets.
Despite the pop-cultural splash that it made in the late 1950s and carried into the early ‘60s, the Ventura’s time on the market was relatively short-lived: Hamilton discontinued the model in 1963, seven years after its high-profile debut. The movement, while revolutionary, wasn’t really optimized for mass production, requiring frequent battery changes, thus limiting its intended usage as a reliable high-tech alternative to a mechanical wristwatch. Hamilton’s innovative electronic timekeeping system would also soon be superseded — first in 1960 by Bulova’s tuning-fork-driven Accutron movement, and eventually in 1969 by the quartz movements pioneered by Japanese brands like Seiko — but the watch would claim an indelible spot in history after it was discovered by one of the 20th century’s most legendary entertainers.
By the time he made Blue Hawaii in 1961, Elvis Presley was already “the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll,” and an American pop cultural institution. He first burst on the national music scene in 1956 with the hit single, “Heartbreak Hotel,” and continued to release hits in subsequent years while gaining fame — and courting controversy — with his smoldering good looks, avant-garde style, and energetic stage performances. Elvis (eventually he was widely recognized by his first name alone) became one of the most famous people in the world and one of the earliest icons of the emerging musical genre that came to be known as rock ‘n’ roll. But Elvis didn’t just want to be a singer: he wanted to be a movie star, like one of his idols, James Dean. He made his film debut in 1956’s Love Me Tender, and went on to star in 31 movies, often releasing more than one per year. As with most of these films, the plot, characters, and songs of Blue Hawaii, the first of three Elvis movies to be shot in the Aloha State, are largely forgettable; the watch that he wore in the movie, in his starring role as singing, surfing heartthrob Chad Gates, is anything but.
In real life, Elvis Presley appreciated fine watches and owned several, including models from Omega, Rolex, and Corum (he was also renowned for giving watches as gifts); one of his favorites was the Hamilton Ventura, whose space-age look and (for the time) cutting-edge technology must have seemed an ideal fit for a performer who embodied at the time the youthful, energetic vibes of the early rock era. (The case shape has been likened over the years to that of a guitar.) Elvis wore his personal Ventura, a rare white-gold model, in Blue Hawaii, and the King’s legions of fans took notice, giving a boost to Hamilton’s electric timepiece that few marketing campaigns could have matched; the Ventura remains one of the most iconic movie watches in history — and one that would go on to more modern silver screen fame decades after Elvis had stopped making movies.
Hamilton welcomed the Ventura back to its lineup in 1988, the now-outdated electric caliber now replaced by a quartz movement, and the precious-metal case giving way to a more widely accessible steel case with gold plating. By this point in its history, Hamilton had also become well established as a provider of watches to Hollywood productions — the first Hamilton watch on screen was in the 1932 Marlene Dietrich film Shanghai Express, and the company’s timepieces have graced more than 500 movies and TV shows since then — and so the Ventura’s return to the silver screen was inevitable.
The Ventura’s second act as a movie watch began in 1997, with the release of Men in Black. Both lead actors in the sci-fi action comedy, Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith, wore a Hamilton Ventura Quartz in their roles, essentially reintroducing its radical design to a new generation of watch enthusiasts. The blockbuster film spawned two sequels, in 2002 and 2012, and Hamilton Ventura watches played vital roles in both. Simultaneously, a growing interest in vintage and collectible historical watches began to exert its influence over watch manufacturers like Hamilton, ushering in a renaissance of modern timepieces that paid clear homage to ancestors from the first half of the 20th century — and ensuring that the Ventura, now an entire family of watches, would maintain a strong presence in Hamilton’s contemporary portfolio.
In 2015, on the occasion of what would have been Elvis Presley’s 80th birthday (he died in 1977), Hamilton brought its revived Hamilton model, and its historical connection to the rock-n-roll icon, back into the spotlight in a major way, in a model that was also boldly modern. The Ventura Elvis80 Automatic, the first Ventura to be outfitted with Hamilton’s proprietary H10 caliber, features all the emblematic design codes laid down in 1957 — the shield-shaped configuration, steeply sloping sapphire crystal, dial with radiating hour markers — and incorporates them into a larger (42.5mm x 44.6mm) steel case with a sleek black PVD finish. The dial is also predominantly black, with Hamilton’s signature orange color used for the central seconds hand as well as for the first 15-minute sector of minute markers. Like most modern iterations of the Ventura, the Elvis80 is also offered in a quartz version, in a non-PVD-coated stainless steel case.
Another anniversary rolled around in 2017: 60 years since the very first, all-electric Hamilton Ventura was released. In commemoration of the milestone, Hamilton launched a triumvirate of Ventura editions: two versions of the vintage-look Ventura Classic and a distinctly avant-garde, skeletonized version of the Elvis80. One of the Classic models channels the original’s luxurious finishing, with a yellow-gold-PVD-coated steel case and a brown leather strap with a “Teju” lizard-skin motif. The other model pays an aesthetic tribute to the dawn of the rock ‘n’ roll era, and Elvis’s heyday, with its 3D-printed, blue dial, whose textured “denim” look (and actual denim strap) evokes the blue jeans that took off in popularity among America’s youth during that period. Both Classic models contain quartz movements and are available in two period-appropriate case sizes — 24mm x 36.5mm, and 32.3mm x 50.3mm.
The Hamilton Ventura Elvis80 Skeleton, in contrast with its mostly vintage-influenced siblings, leans heavily into a high-tech, futuristic look with its skeletonized dial execution — perhaps more “Men in Black” sci-fi than “Blue Hawaii” retro charm — even though its design, with a geometrical criss-crossed pattern, might also remind many of a microphone that Elvis may have used to record his first hits at Memphis’s Sun Studio. Measuring 42.5mm x 44.6mm in polished steel, the case holds Hamilton’s Caliber H-10-S automatic movement (the “S” is for skeleton), noteworthy for its 80-hour power reserve, and integrates into a very modern black rubber strap.
Hamilton added additional versions of the Elvis80 Skeleton in 2021, reinterpreting the openworked dial design to include a zigzagging “electric pulse” motif across the center line. This detail was present on early Ventura models, including the one owned by Elvis, and calls to mind the groundbreaking electrical caliber that helped put the ventura on the map (even though the movement inside is the same Caliber H-10-S that powers the watch’s predecessors,) The steel cases of the 2021 models, still at a fairly substantial 42.5mm x 44.6mm, offer two new finishes, with rose-gold-colored PVD and black PVD.
Dropping in 2022, on what would have been the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’s 87th birthday, was the Ventura S Quartz, distinguished by a revamped “3D illusion” design. The triangular cases of the models lie somewhere between the dominant dimensions of the Elvis80 Automatic and Skeleton models and the more modest measurements of the Classics — 34.5mm x 38mm and just shy of 11mm thick. Their textured, multidimensional dials feature an embossed triangle pattern whose interacting geometric shapes and kaleidoscopic surfaces create an eye-catching combination of light reflections and shadows — perhaps subtly reminiscent of the light shows of Elvis’s later Vegas years. Each dial-color version is matched to an integrated rubber strap of the same color; humming inside the 50-meter water-resistant Ventura case is a Swiss-made quartz caliber.
“Blue Suede Shoes,” written and first recorded by legendary guitarist Carl Perkins, is regarded as one of the first songs from the musical genre known as rockabilly, an early forerunner of rock and roll. It was the opening track on Elvis Presley’s eponymous debut album from 1956 and became one of the King’s first huge hits. Hamilton’s most recent Ventura models, called Ventura Blue, pay homage to the song with their gradient blue dials, whose brushed pattern resonates with the curves of the triangular case. Offered in six total references in stainless steel or yellow-gold PVD, including two chronograph versions, the new models have 32.3mm x 50.3mm x 9.2mm cases, Swiss-made quartz movements, and nickel-plated or yellow-gold-colored hands and hour markers on the dial, which also hosts a red-tipped central seconds hand and the vintage lightning-bolt motif. The Ventura Blue watches come mounted on either the hallmark Ventura “flex” metal bracelet or a blue Alcantara leather strap that echoes the dial.
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