WHY WE LOVE IT
Born in 1815, Ferdinand Adolph Lange received a rigorous education at the hands of nurses and governesses. At 15 he became a student at the Saxon Technical school in Dresden. Following that, he pursued training under Johann Christian Friedrich Gutkaes, Sr, royal clockmaker to the King of Saxony. In 1846 he and his brother-in-law formed A. Lange & Söhne.
Lange’s use of precision tools and instruments allowed the manufacture to attain a level of precision that was heretofore unknown in mass-produced watches. After his death in 1878, his sons Richard and Emil would carry on his legacy. However, the Soviet occupation of East Germany at the end of the Second World War saw an end to A. Lange & Söhne. But after Reunification in the 1990s, the manufacture would make its triumphant return. At the helm of the company would be another Lange, Ferdinand’s great-grandson Walter.
The model 1815 honors this watchmaking legacy. Simple and elegant, it’s a careful distillation of Saxon watchmaking and design — adorned with just enough decoration to be beautiful, its otherwise minimalist look mixes Bauhaus principles with classical aesthetics.
This particular 1815 from the circa the late 1990s features a 36mm, 18K yellow gold case, a sapphire crystal, a sapphire display back, an 18K signed yellow gold crown and 18K polished bezel, and its original signed brown alligator leather strap with a signed 18K yellow gold pin buckle. Its gorgeous satin silver non-luminous dial features printed black Arabic indices and a subsidiary seconds counter at 6:00, plus a set of matching blued steel ‘lance’ hands.
But this 1815 wouldn’t be a Lange without an equally stunning, in-house movement — in this case, the manually-wound Caliber L941.1. Visible via the sapphire case back, it’s utterly captivating to behold, and serves as a quick explanation as to Lange’s elevated status in the watch world.
In outstanding condition, and produced in small numbers, this smaller take on the 1815 represents one of the most refined modern dresses watches in the world.
Try it on the wrist once, and you'll have a tough time taking it off — don't say we didn't warn you!
OVERALL CONDITION
Case is in fantastic condition overall showing light professional refinishing and only faint signs of wear from gentle use. Satin silver dial with applied yellow gold indices is in outstanding, as-new condition with matching blued-steel ‘lance’ handset. 18K signed crown. Sapphire display caseback.
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