WHY WE LOVE IT
A perpetual calendar is like a small computer on your wrist.
Think of it this way: Imagine a watch that keeps track of not only the time, but also the date, the day of the week, and the month, and also tells you whether it’s a leap year or not, and what the current phase of the moon is. Oh, and one more thing — imagine it does all of this mechanically, using springs and gears, and that you only have to adjust it once every century or so. Crazy, right?
Perpetual calendars are Patek Philippe’s speciality — it’s been making them in series since the 1940s. This particular quantieme perpetual, a Reference 5140R-011 dating to circa 2018, is a true beauty. Housed in a 37mm 18K rose gold case, it features a sapphire crystal, sapphire exhibition caseback, 18k rose gold signed crown, and a beautiful, satin silver ‘Tiffany’-signed dial with applied rose gold indices and matching dauphine handset. Powered by the Cal. 240 Q automatic movement with micro-rotor, it’s absolutely a piece of horological art — the type of timepiece that gets passed down through the generations.
Perpetual calendars are Patek Philippe’s speciality — it’s been making them in series since the 1940s. This particular quantieme perpetual, a Reference 5059P, dates to the 2000s. Housed in a 36mm platinum “hunter”-style case with a domed sapphire crystal, a signed crown, and a polished bezel, it features a white enamel dial with a black, oxidized gold feuille handset, black painted Roman numeral indices, an inner date track with Arabic numeral indices, a moonphase aperture at 6 o’clock, a day aperture at 9 o’clock, a leap year window at 12 o’clock, a month aperture at 3 o’clock, and a retrograde date pointer. Powered by the Patek Philippe Calibre 315/136 automatic movement, it’s paired to a black alligator leather strap with a signed, platinum deployant clasp.
In great condition, this QP with its hunter case flawlessly bridges the gap between classic pocket watch and modern wristwatch design, resulting in a modern timepiece that encapsulates the best of Patek’s history.
Any old wristwatch can tell the time. Few truly define it.
OVERALL CONDITION
The case is in excellent condition overall showing light signs of wear from age and use. White enamel dial with painted black 'Roman' indices is in as-new condition with matching 'feuille' handset. Officers exhibition caseback. 18K signed crown.
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