Here it is with a shiney new period correct Duchess watch band
It's cool that you have an Elgin. I'd love an old Curvex myself.
Yeah, vintage Gruen are a good value.It's cool that you have an Elgin. I'd love an old Curvex myself.
Thanks for the tipIt's cool that you have an Elgin. I'd love an old Curvex myself.
The Texas Instruments watch was HUGE!!!!! in the 1970's.I wish I still had my original TI LED quartz, circa ~1975-77. I'd proudly post a photo of it on my wrist right now if I still had it. The chip came from the floor above the area I'd worked in just a year or so prior (yes, in TX). It was a bit of a milestone piece. Accurate digital wrist tech for the common man, and back when we actually made cool stuff in my country, and had the people who knew how to do it, and wanted to do it. I'm still one, but it's gettin' pretty lonely these days.
You know that "I've-just-seen-a-ghost" shock you get when you've been jolted back 50 years to a memory you haven't had since? Yeah, I just had one of those! This watch (or likely it's cheaper descendants) was popular when I was in grade school, and it was the only watch that anyone seemed to have if they had a watch at all. IIRC, one needed to press the button to show the time as battery and LED tech was not yet up to maintaining a constant "on" for the watch without quickly running it dry. (Probably similar to the illuminator light on a present-day Casio.) Speaking of Casio, I think my first watch (as I was never bequeathed a TI) was the metal version of the current Casio A158.The Texas Instruments watch was HUGE!!!!! in the 1970's.
One of the first (if not THE first) James Bond watches was a Gruen. It was not issued to him by Q Section and was simply seen on his wrist at one point. It is unknown who decided on that watch, but general consensus is that Connery simply wore one of his personal watches to the shoot.
Yes. This one is Japan