This year's big focus for Cartier is its new Pasha collection, but the Métiers d'Art pieces are what stole the show
Any watch collector worth his or her salt is able to shoot off a series of reasons why haute horology matters.
When it comes to assembling and finishing mechanical movements, numerous brands have mastered the necessary ins and outs, but every so often a watchmaker offers something unique: a rare, one-of-a-kind dial that is handcrafted by the industry's most highly-skilled artisans.
In 2014, Cartier transformed an old barn in Switzerland's La Chaux-de-Fonds into its Maison de Métiers d’Arts—a state-of-the-art watchmaking facility and showroom, which is where the watchmaker creates its most exceptional timepieces using centuries-old techniques such as enamel work and gem-setting.
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Unveiled at this year's Watches & Wonders, the Ronde Louis Cartier Straw and Gold Marquetry timepiece is one such masterpiece. Not only does this wristwatch go far beyond the standard expectations of a modern time-telling device, it blends Cartier's decadent history with its manufacture's innovative watchmaking techniques.
The Ronde Louis Cartier Straw and Gold Marquetry watch is one of two Métiers d’Arts creations unveiled by the brand at this year's Watches & Wonders, and both depict the iconic panther motif, which was first introduced to a Cartier watch collection in 1914.