Shopping Bag: (0)
It's a lovely picture, but not very representative of the modern - or even necessarily traditional - watch industry The watch industry was - and in large part remains - predominately a cottage industry, which means that watchmakers were generally specialized in one component, a set of components, or in assembling components Revolutionary changes: CAD, CAM, and CNC.
For centuries all watch parts were made by hand using traditional tools and hand-driven lathes because that was all that was available; however the last 15 years have brought about revolutionary changes in how a mechanical watch is manufactured Philippe Dufour, who still actively produces watches, comes as close these days to the imagined ideal making handmade watches The few watches that emerge from Dufour's workshop every year are indeed about as close to handmade as the watch industry is capable of producing in this day and age now that Daniels is gone.
" are not seeing the big picture; the handmade watch has much more elegance - like nature, it is proportional The finishing is therefore what we are usually referring to in modern "Handmade" watches since most mechanical watches are assembled by hand. . Source