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Tudor launches the Black Bay 54 "Lagoon Blue" with a new beach-like vibe ✓ Check out this summery light-blue-dial dive watch ...
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The new Tudor Ranger (right) celebrates the Tudor Oyster Prince (left) watches issued to members of the 1952 British North Greenland Expedition. Tudor That’s because there’s more to the Ranger’s story ...
What we like: This is a handsome Oyster-cased (à la Rolex) Tudor from the 1960s, with the same charming rose logo and “shock resisting” on the dial as the field watch below. A screw-down crown gives ...
Tudor will be hoping it can replicate the success of its Black Bay Chronograph in ‘Flamingo Blue’ with the release of a trim ...
Back then, the Groupe d’Étude et de Recherches Sous-Marines (G.E.R.S.), a scientific body attached to the French Navy, tested a series of Tudor Oyster Prince Submariner watches to assess them ...
the 1952 Tudor Oyster Prince Ref. 7808 marked the first time a Tudor watch had both a waterproof case and an automatic movement, making it technically superior at the time. The movement was the ...
The first models, the Tudor Oyster and Oyster Prince ... were positioned to be ever-more masculine — the kind of watch that not only the British Royal Navy would take on expedition, as it ...
Tudor's newest creation—the 39mm Ranger watch—celebrates a key moment from ... and 30 of them went equipped with the then-new Tudor Oyster Prince, the first Tudor that was both waterproof ...
When Tudor launched the Oyster Prince in 1952, the brand’s advertising emphasised the watch’s robustness in prosaic ways: it was shown being worn by a workman operating a pneumatic drill ...
Tudor Watches were first put on the map due to the Oyster Prince Submariner Diving Watch which debuted in 1954. The utilitarian timepiece was issued with water resistance up to 100m as well as ...