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Watch lovers may be settling into a modern Golden Era of watch dial making, with many brands over the past several ramping up the creativity — experimenting with bolder colors, innovative layouts and textures, and even an array of unconventional materials and processes in their dials' production. This is happening from Kickstarter brands all the way to the top of the watch industry food chain — with independent brands as well as those owned by large luxury conglomerates making a concerted effort to offer watch dial options that set their timepieces apart. We've compiled a list — which many will, of course, find far from exhaustive - of some of our favorite watch dials that you can find on current models from an array of brands.
The Big Crown Pointer Date is one of Oris's most well-established signature pieces and it has debuted in some very nontraditional colorways of late, most of which have been very well received. The dial that stands out from our perspective is this maroon version which is rich, warm and luxurious and provides a nice background for the off-white print and lume-treated cathedral hands. Maroon, sometime referred to as burgundy, is a color that has popped up on other brands (like the Rado watch a bit further down the list), and the execution on this Oris watch is among the best we’ve seen; it's also a color that is versatile enough to wear daily.
Specifications: Price: $1750-$1950, Case Size: 40 mm, Case Height: 11.8 mm, Lug to Lug: 48.2 mm, Strap Width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50M, Movement: Auto Oris 754 (Sellita SW200)
Blue and green dials are all over the marketplace today, particularly in sportier executions across all different price categories. One of the more interesting colors to come out of this blue-green spectrum has been this teal hue chosen for this Tissot Seastar 2000 Powermatic 80 model. The Seastar 2000 is sharp in any of its three configurations, but this teal dial really stands out, particularly with the ocean wave dial treatment. The dial coloring is also sophisticated, with a vignette cast radially from the center, changing the dynamic of the color as it moves toward the edge of the dial and creating a very pleasing aesthetic.
Specifications: Price: $1025, Case Size: 46 mm, Case Height: 15.8 mm, Lug Width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 600M, Movement: Auto Powermatic 80.111
Not quite a household name yet, Formex has been flying under the radar for some time, while releasing some well-executed sports models in its Essence collection. Both the Essence 39 and 43 are executed with a hand-sprayed gradient “degrade” style in grey that ranges from gunmetal silver to nearly black depending on how light hits it. The dial also features milled horizontal lines, reminiscent of those on the Omega Aqua Terra, as well as expertly applied dial indices and balanced hands with plenty of lume when you need it. It’s the combination of machining, color, and design that make this a beautiful dial at a very good price.
Specifications: Price: $1280-1390, Case Size: 39 mm, Case Height: 10 mm, Lug to Lug: 45 mm, Strap Width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100M, Movement: Auto Sellita SW200-1 COSC Certified
The Hamilton Ventura, the world’s first electric wristwatch, rose to fame when Elvis Presley wore it in the film Blue Hawaii in 1961 and the model has been associated with the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll ever since. “Blue Suede Shoes,” the opening track on Elvis’s 1956 debut album and one of his first first huge hits, inspired the dial of Hamilton’s recently released Ventura Blue. The watch pays homage to the song with its gradient blue dial whose brushed pattern resonates with the curves of the emblematic, triangular Ventura case. A Swiss quartz movement beats inside the 32.3mm x 50.3mm case, while the dial hosts nickel-plated hands and a vintage lightning-bolt motif that recalls the model’s electric-powered origins. The Ventura Blue comes mounted on either a “flex” metal bracelet or a blue Alcantara leather strap that echoes the dial.
Specifications: Price: $975 - $995, Case Size: 32.3mm x 50.3mm, Thickness; 9.27mm, Crystal: Mineral Glass, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Quartz ETA Caliber F05.115
Nomos is immersed in the Bauhaus principle of form following function, which makes the German brand both popular and somewhat polarizing. One area where Nomos has separated itself from the crowd, besides its famously minimalist design ethic, is its use of adventurous dial colors. The Siren Blue dial color is found on several different models, but its best value proposition is on the Club Neomatik, a 37mm, three-hand timepiece that contains the DUW 3001 automatic in-house movement. The bright neon-like blue is accented with orange and white dial elements for a really exciting combination. In a market saturated with blue — pardon the pun — the Siren Blue stands out proudly among its contemporaries.
Specifications: Price: $3,160-$3,480, Case Size: 37 mm, Case Height: 9.3 mm, Lug Width: 28mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 200M, Movement: Auto DUW3001
While we could pick a number of different Seiko models, for this list we are going to highlight the SRPF41, the limited-edition Presage model with the matcha tea- green dial. Beyond the incredibly attractive vignette-style dark green color that is present on this piece, it’s the texture that takes it to a different level — dial texture, of course, being something that Seiko does better than almost anyone else. This fine granular texture is an ode to the famous Japanese matcha tea powder — hence the color choice — that has been an important staple of Japanese food culture and is now popularizing around the world. For the price, this is one of the most compelling dial concepts currently available.
Specifications: Price: $480, Case Size: 38.5 mm, Case Height: 11.9 mm, Lug to Lug: 45 mm, Strap Width: 20mm, Crystal: Hardlex, Water Resistance: 50M, Movement: Auto 4R35
Grand Seiko recently released the SLGH005 with its white birch dial texture that represents the thriving forest located in Shizukuishi, Japan, just outside of the Grand Seiko headquarters. This dial is manufactured very much in the same spirit as the popular SBGA011 and SBGA211 Snowflake, upon which you have two kinds of textures: a larger texture that creates these prominent wavy bark-like features that articulate vertically across the dial as well as a much finer granular texture that adds incredible depth and character. While this is among the more expensive watches on this list — with a retail price of $9,100 — it is testament to the fact that Grand Seiko is producing some of the best dials anywhere in the world, regardless of price point.
Specifications: Price: $9,100, Case Size: 40 mm, Case Height: 11.7 mm, Movement: Auto 9SA5
Boutique Swiss watchmaker Louis Erard has become well known among connoisseurs for its collaborations with iconoclastic indie watchmakers and other artisans, and also for its creative takes on the classic regulator dial design. Both aspects are on display with the Le Regulateur Louis Erard x Olivier Mosset edition, limited to 178 pieces. The watch’s sleekly monochromatic, black-on-black aesthetic unites a sandblasted, black PVD-treated steel case with a black dial and hands sprinkled with a smattering of silver glitter. As on the historical “regulator” chronometer clocks that inspired its dial, the hour, minute and seconds are on three distinct, mechanically separated hands. Mosset, a Swiss street artist and avid motorcyclist who collaborated with Louis Erard on the design, had the metallic paint of automobile bodies in mind when he suggested the dark but sparkly dial finish.
Specifications: Price: $4,225, Case Size: 42mm, Thickness: 12.25mm, Lug to Lug: 49.6mm, Lug Width: 22mm, Water Resistance: 50m, Crystal: Sapphire, Movement: Automatic Sellita SW226-1
Alpina’s limited edition Seastrong Diver Gyre Automatic’s reverse vignette configuration is a refreshing take on the ever popular blue dial. Instead of the dial getting darker as you move to the outside edge, this dial gets brighter the further out from the center you go. Starting with a deep navy blue center, the dial quickly transitions into a sky blue. Large white luminous dial elements add to the ocean inspired colorway we see here. Alpina puts together an interesting aesthetic with this Gyre limited edition.
Specifications: Price: $1,595, Case Size: 44 mm, Case Height: 12.15 mm, Strap Width: 22mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 300M, Movement: Auto AL-525
As the winner of the 2017 GPHP Revival Price award, the Longines Avigation BigEye brought back the inspired looks of aviation chronographs from the 1930s. Originally released in a retro black dial to pay homage to the original vintage models, Longines added an exceptional fumé blue dial (called Petroleum), that features black sub-registers, beige Super Luminova treated hands and hour markers as well as bold contrasting white print against the black of those sub-registers. The dial has a granular metallic finish and texture to it that darkens as it approaches the edge of the dial creating a “tropical” effect. The blue dial is the more popular of the two dial options and stands out from other similarly styled aviators.
Specifications: Price: $3,225, Case Size: 41 mm, Case Height: 14.5 mm, Lug to Lug: 45 mm, Strap Width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 30M, Movement: Auto L688
Meistersinger offers a range of really compelling dial colors and configurations that give the brand a distinct aesthetic to stand out in a very crowded market of small watch startup types. The German Bauhaus styling is prevalent and, like it’s more famous stylistic contemporary Nomos, the use of color is helping define the brand. Recently, Meistersinger launched their Bordeaux Degrade (gradient) dials to add to the impressive arrays of colors already present. Deep purple and ruby red tones flood the sunburst dials with a dark gradient effect that we’ve seen grace this list more often than not. These rich, lush colors provide excellent contrast to the simplistic white elements of the large open dial.
Specifications: Price: $3,225, Case Size: 36 & 40mm, Case Height: 9.7 mm, Crystal: Acrylic, Water Resistance: 30M, Movement: Auto Sellita SW200
Breitling’s Classic AVI collection revives the aesthetic of a much-beloved, aviation-inspired model from 1953, nicknamed the “Co-Pilot,” and adopts the distinctive livery of classic warplanes. The Super AVI Curtiss Warhawk watch screams “military” with its dark olive green dial and red and white details that recall the 1938 fighter jet’s legendary shark-mouth nose art. Its case measures a stout 46 mm in diameter, with an oversized screwed crown and a knurled bidirectionally rotating bezel. The three-register dial includes displays for running seconds, two chronograph counters, and a second time zone via a red-tipped GMT hand. Breitling’s in-house, automatic Caliber B04 ticks inside the watch, behind a caseback adorned with an illustration of the namesake aircraft, storing a 70-hour power reserve.
Specifications: Price: $10,100, Case Size: 46mm, Case Height: 15.9mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100m, Movement: Automatic Breitling B04
Starting out as an uncommonly water-resistant gents’ watch in 1948, welcoming its first purpose-built divers’ watch in 1957, and becoming the official watch of James Bond with the introduction of the tough, stylish Seamaster Diver in the 1990s, the Omega Seamaster collection has grown into a diverse product family. In the 21st Century it has added the Aqua Terra line, a dressier, elegantly understated sibling of the sporty, more robustly built Diver models. Like the 1948 Seamaster, Aqua Terra models eschew the rotating divers’ bezel and other tool-watch accouterments for a more streamlined style, with simple wedge-shaped hour markers inspired by the silhouette of a sailboat, and a triangular hour hand paired with an arrow-tipped minute hand. In 2022, Omega introduced the Aqua Terra Shades collection, sporting a variety of dazzling colorways, including the Saffron-dial model showcased here. Like the other Shades models, it features a unisex 38mm case and eschews the familiar Aqua Terra teakwood textured pattern in favor of a PVD sunburst finish. Inside is Omega’s self-winding Caliber 8800, which stores a power reserve of 55 hours.
Specifications: Price: $6,600, Case Size:38mm, Thickness: 12.3mm, Lug to Lug: 44.9mm, Lug Width: 19mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 150 meters, Movement: Automatic Omega Caliber 8800
Moser has long been known for its dazzling fumé dials, and the brand’s signature “Funky Blue” dial makes its latest appearance on this recent iteration of the Streamliner, a daringly different type of chronograph that takes its name from the high-speed trains of the 1920s and ’30s remembered for their rounded, aerodynamic curves. Accordingly, the watch’s ergonomically curved steel case integrates fluidly into the supple bracelet. Following the Moser ethos of simplicity outside and complexity inside, the watch has its chronograph readouts cleverly incorporated into the edge of the dial, rather than on subdials, for an overall clean look. The engraved crown is at 4 o’clock and the chronograph pushers are unusually placed at 10 and 2 o’clock, evoking the “bull’s head” designs of vintage stopwatches. Moser developed an entirely new movement, Caliber HMC 902, for the watch, which features a hidden rotor for automatic winding and thus allows the decorative plates and bridges to shine through the exhibition caseback.
Specifications: Price: $43,900, Case Size: 42.3mm, Case Height: 14.2mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 120m, Movement: Automatic HMC 902
The SeaQ dive watch hails from Glashütte Original’s Spezialist collection of sport-luxury timepieces inspired by the Spezimatic Type RP TS 200, a watch developed by the German brand’s ancestor for recreational divers and released in 1969. Its stainless-steel case measures 39.5 mm in diameter and has an assortment of polished and brushed finishes. Both the dial and the ceramic inlay of the unidirectional rotating dive-scale bezel are in a rich “reed green” color developed by the brand. Like its brethren in the Spezialist collection, the SeaQ meets the (German) DIN 8306 and (international) ISO 6425 standards for dive watches, and its solid engraved caseback protects the in-house Glashütte Original Caliber 39-11, with its 40-hour power reserve, from water pressures down to 200 meters.
Specifications: Price: $9,000, Case Size: 39.5mm, Case Height: 12.15mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 200m, Movement: Automatic Caliber 39-11
Montblanc’s Heritage collection is composed of modern timepieces heavily influenced by historical ones made by Minerva, the legendary watch manufacturer that became part of Montblanc’s watchmaking division in 2009 when it was bought by parent company Richemont. The Pythagore Small Seconds revives a style of watch (and a style of movement) that Minerva produced in the 1940s and dresses it up for today’s audience with the addition of a radiant brown-tone dial with two different finishes for its center and its outer edge. The dauphine hands, small seconds sundial and railroad minute track are callbacks to the vintage model, and inside the rose-gold case ticks a manually wound, elaborately decorated movement based on the historical Minerva Caliber 46, which boasts its own modern upgrade, namely an 80-hour power reserve.
Specifications: Price: $21,445, Case Size: 39mm, Case Height: 9.5mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50m, Movement: Manual-wound Caliber MB M14.08
Bell & Ross consulted professional divers and other underwater experts on the design of its BR 03-92 Diver Orange, whose bright orange dial, used here for the first time on a Bell & Ross dive watch, matches the color of rescue divers’ suits. The professional-grade dive watch comes in Bell & Ross’ hallmark squared case in satin-brushed steel and includes a unidirectional rotating bezel calibrated for 60 minutes to set dive times. Contrasting with the painted orange surface are white applied hour indexes and black skeleton hands. Inside the case, which resists water pressure to 300 meters, is a soft-iron inner cage shielding the self-winding movement — the BR-Cal.302, based on the Sellita SW 300.1 — from the effects of magnetic fields.
Specifications: Price: $3,900, Case Size: 42mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 300m, Movement: Automatic BR-CAL.302
Rado resurrected its little-remembered 1960s dive watch, the Captain Cook, several years ago and the retro model has become a somewhat surprising success for the avant-garde design-oriented brand, available in a number of contemporary colorways and case materials. The standout is this model that combines a 42-mm brushed bronze case with a sunburst burgundy dial and matching dive-scale bezel insert (made of ceramic, of course, as per Rado’s specialty). Rado also makes a smaller version, at 37mm, and a larger one, at 45mm; this model is the happy medium, The hands and markers are in a yellow-gold color that matches the case’s bronze tone, and at 12 o’clock sits a similarly hued anchor logo on a ruby background that swings subtly with the motions of the wearer’s wrist. A solid titanium caseback protects the movement, a self-winding ETA C07.611.
Specifications: Price: $2,600, Case Size: 42mm, Case Height: 12.5mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 300m, Movement: Automatic ETA C07.611
Jaeger-LeCoultre’s iconic Reverso — whose hallmark two-sided, pivoting case was originally developed for polo players — marked its 90-year anniversary in 2021 and celebrated with a number of notable tribute pieces, including this attractive Small Seconds limited edition with a green lacquered dial and matching green leather strap. All the Reverso’s enduring Art Deco-inspired elements are on hand, including the gadroons on the top and bottom of the swiveling case and the dial’s elegantly faceted hour markers and sharply drawn sword hands. The rectangle-shaped, manually wound movement inside, Caliber 822/2, is made in-house and amasses a power reserve of 42 hours. The green leather strap is made by Casa Fagliano, a venerable Argentinean firm that makes some of the world’s best polo boots.
Specifications: Price: $8,750, Case Size: 45.6mm x 27.4mm, Case Height: 8.5mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 30m, Movement: Manual wound JLC Caliber 822/2
Chopard’s Alpine Eagle combines the design DNA of its first sports watch, the 1970s St. Moritz, with a modern, organically textured dial motif that evokes the iris of an eagle’s eye. Other avian touches include a seconds-hand counterweight in the shape of a feather, and a multi-textured finish on the case inspired by the sun falling on snow-capped glaciers. The recently released “Monte Rosa Pink” edition has a case made from Chopard’s proprietary Lucent steel, an alloy composed of 85 percent recycled materials and designed to be extra hard as well as extra brilliant. The case is extra-thin, at just 8mm in profile, and the shimmering colors of the brass-base dial take their inspiration from the pinkish skies over the Monte Rosa range of the Alps. The movement inside, automatic Caliber L.U.C 96.40-L, is similarly thin (just 3.3mm) and boasts a chronometer certification as well as a 65-hour power reserve.
Specifications: Price: $24,300, Case Size: 41mm, Lug Width: 8.20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100 meters, Movement: Automatic Chopard Caliber L.U.C 96.40-L
IWC melds the worlds of aviation and automobile racing in the Pilot’s Watch Chronograph Edition “AMG,” developed by the Swiss watchmaker in collaboration with its longtime partners at Mercedes-AMG. It’s the first Pilot’s Watch Chrono with a titanium case and making it even more notable is the woven carbon fiber dial, made using the same process that the German carmaker uses to produce aero components to achieve its layered textile look. Adding contrast and contributing to the watch’s sleek motorsport dashboard aesthetic are the silvered subdials for the chronograph displays. Beating behind a tinted sapphire caseback window with an AMG logo is IWC’s manufacture Caliber 69385.
Specifications: Price: $9,100, Case Size: 43mm, Case Height: 14.9mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 60m, Movement: Automatic IWC Caliber 69385
Hublot is known more for sporty boldness than understated stylishness but the watches from its Berluti series, produced in partnership with French high-end shoemaker Berluti, are among its most elegant, at least among the brand’s more male-targeted pieces. An exceptional example from recent years is the “Cold Brown” limited edition, the first Berluti watch to use the Big Bang Chronograph as its base model. The unique dial construction encases Berluti’s own brown patina leather between two pieces of sapphire glass, which have also been carefully cut out to reveal the gears of the movement in the center. The leather’s natural hide has been treated to ensure an unchanging “frozen in time” surface, and the hour numerals have been embossed into the leather for an even greater sense of depth. Hublot even incorporated the leather — treated differently to achieve a patina over time — into the hallmark Big Bang octagonal bezel.
Specifications: Price: $26,200, Case Size: 45mm, Case Height: 16.4mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100m, Movement: Automatic Hublot Caliber MHUB1242
The Tutima Flieger (named for the German word for “flier” or “pilot”) makes a handsome monochromatic statement with its slate-gray dial and tone-on-tone Horween leather strap. The 41-mm stainless steel case frames the degradé-effect dial that radiates from light grey at its center to nearly black at its periphery. The triangle with two dots at the 12 o’clock position, luminous-coated along with the hands and indexes, identifies this watch’s military-descendant heritage and its red central seconds hand provides an elegant contrast that helps ensure this watch can transition seamlessly from the cockpit to the boardroom. German-based Tutima uses the Swiss automatic ETA 2386 as the base for the modified Tutima Caliber 330, which maintains a 42-hour power reserve.
Specifications: Price: $1,650, Case Size: 41mm, Case Height: 13mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100m, Movement: Automatic Tutima Caliber 330
Rolex Datejust 36 - Fluted Motif
The new fluted motif dial on the 2021 Datejust 36 isn’t just good looking and totally interesting, it’s also a future classic in the making. Of course, expect the oystersteel blue dial Rolesor variant to be in immediate short supply, but just perhaps the market will blink long enough on the two tone variants for some regular accessibility, as unlikely as that may be. Right now, Rolex is only making these dials for the 36 collection but it probably won’t be shocking to see these dials make their way into the Datejust 41 in coming years.
Specifications: Price: $7300-$18,900, Case Size: 36 mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100M, Movement: Auto Rolex 3235
This ultra-exclusive timepiece, limited to 18 pieces, was developed in a collaboration between Girard-Perregaux and the legendary Bordeaux winemaker Château Latour. Each watch’s gold-hued dial is subtly unique from the others, formed from light-colored pebbles in the Chateau Latour vineyards in the Prémier Cru Medoc region of France — the same pebbles that blanket the fertile ground and reflect sunlight to stimulate the growth of the world-famous vines that yield Chateau Latour grapes. More than a full day’s work is required for each dial, with the artisan cutting and grinding each pebble to reduce its thickness for the dial’s brass base, yielding the tiny fissures, indents, and hollows that make each dial one-of-a-kind. The rose-gold case continues the golden hue of the dial and contains the in-house automatic Caliber GP03300. The watch will only be made available to private guests of Chateau Latour’s estate in France and Girard-Perregaux’s manufacture in Switzerland.
Specifications: Price: On Request, Case Size: 40mm, Thickness: 9.4mm, Water Resistance: 30 meters, Crystal: Sapphire, Movement: Automatic Girard-Perregaux Caliber GP03300-2180
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